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Book Review: War Against Azerbaijan - Targeting Cultural Heritage"

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  • Book Review: War Against Azerbaijan - Targeting Cultural Heritage"

    New book review.

    http://www.accc.org.uk/Book%20review%20En g%20v7%20-13MAY07.pdf
    London, April 2008

    "War Against Azerbaijan - Targeting Cultural Heritage", part of the
    series "The true facts about Garabagh".
    Compiled by Kamala Imranli. (Unknown authors).
    280 pages, 27x25cm, cloth-bound, including a CD-ROM and a DVD.
    Published by Heydar Aliyev Foundation and The Ministry of Foreign
    Affairs of The Republic of Azerbaijan, Baku, 2007
    ISBN (10) 9952-8091-4-X, ISBN (13) 978-9952-8091-4-5. Price unknown.

    This handsomely prepared book is clearly aimed to appeal the
    prospective browser. However, the real aim of the book is somewhat
    different. Books of this ilk can only serve a propaganda purpose by
    aiming to create and instigate animosity between neighbouring peoples
    by direct geopolitical agitation, disinformation and outright reversal
    of the truth. This can help the ruling elite, who are interested merely
    in their own financial and political gains and status, at the cost of
    the lives of their own citizens, as well as others.

    The book begins with a brief history of Azerbaijan, so as to convince
    the layman that this country had been established in the present region
    for millennia. It completely overlooks the fact that the real and
    historic Azerbaijan has been and remains a north-western province of
    Iran, and the erstwhile country of Lesser Media. During Alexander the
    Great's expeditions, one of the patriotic Median generals named Atropat
    fiercely defended his homeland and in his honour the province was named
    Atropatene, in time evolving into Adharabadgan, Adharbigan and
    Azerbaijan.1

    When using the name Azerbaijan, one must be careful to qualify what is
    indicated by this name, since for two millennia Azerbaijan has been the
    north-western province of Iran, located south of the Araxes river,
    while The Republic of Azerbaijan is the name given to the territory
    across the river since 1918 only. After becoming independent in 1918
    this country was first named `Eastern and Southern Transcaucasia'
    renamed `The Republic of Azerbaijan' by the ruling nationalist Musavat
    party it, thus reclassifying the local Tatar population as `Azeris'.2
    This very same territory was for centuries divided into various
    khanates such as Shirvan, Shamakhi, Talish, Ganja (Elizavetpol)
    Qarabagh etc., parts of which were semi-autonomous under Persian or
    Russian suzerainty (see map of Fig. 1). According to Toumanoff, after
    the demise of the kingdom of Caucasian Albania in 1166 the power was
    transferred into the hands of the Armenian Khachen family, whose Meliks
    (Lords) ruled their territories and later shared power with various
    Muslim Khans until the 19th century.3

    In the Russian translation of the 9th century geographical work by Ibn
    Khurdadhbeh, published in Azerbaijan, there is a map of the area, which
    confirms the above statement. It shows Armenia reaching lake Sevan,
    while Azerbaijan is denoted as the territory south of the Araxes River
    as one of the regions of Iran. To the north of this are the regions of
    Arran, Shirvan, Mughan, Shaki and Tabarsaran.4

    The famous Russian Orientalist Academician V. Bartold in one of his
    lectures given during November and December of 1924 in the Oriental
    Faculty of Azerbaijan State University stated `¦ the territory that is
    now known as The Republic of Azerbaijan, which in the past was named
    Arran [Caucasian Albania], was given the name Azerbaijan thinking that
    when this country is established, the Persian

    1 Prof. Enayatollah Reza's article in the Ettelaat periodical `Siasi va
    Eghtesadi' (Politics and Economics), Arran [Albania] wa Azerbaijan.
    Chegune name Azerbaijan bar Arran nahadeh shod?, Tehran, 2002, Vol.
    181-182, pp. 4-25.
    2 Richard G Hovannisian, Armenia on the road to Independence, 1918,
    University of Southern California 1967, p. 189.
    3 Cyril Toumanoff, Studies in Christian Caucasian history, Georgetown
    University Press, 1963, pp. 216-7.
    4 Ibn Khurdadhbeh, Ã?à - èãà Ã?óòå&#xC 3;& #xA8; è Ã`òðà&#xC 3; - , Azerbaijan National Academy of
    Sciences, Baku 1986, p. 290 map. 10.
    1

    and this Azerbaijan will become a united country ¦'.5 This political
    game was analogous to the case of one of the constituent republics of
    Yugoslavia, Macedonia, adopting the name of an existing Greek province
    of Macedonia. The tensions engendered by this move still rumble on.

    As described in the Introduction of this volume, the region was in days
    of old entitled [Caucasian] Albania, populated by Albanians, Christian
    since the 4th century. After the onslaught of the Turkic tribes of
    Tatars, Mongols and Seljuks were overrun and assimilated with the
    ruling newcomers. The resulting mixture of races later converted to
    Islam, changing its language to Turkish, spoken by the new rulers. It
    must be added that on the other hand the Armenians living in the
    isolated mountainous regions stubbornly adhered to their language and
    religion.

    The population of the Iranian province of Azerbaijan, the true Azeris,
    spoke an old Pahlavi dialect - referred to as the Azeri language, which
    during the reign of Mongols and Seljuks in the 13-15th centuries
    gradually changed into Turkish, the language spoken by the overlords.6
    It is noteworthy that in Iranian Azerbaijan there remain certain
    villages, where the remnants of the old Azeri dialects, such as Tati
    and Harzani are spoken.7
    Fig. 1 - Senex's map of the Caspian Sea, 1742.

    The map shows various regional khanates as well as Armenia (yellow) and
    Georgia (red).
    The area known today as The Republic of Azerbaijan consists of the
    khanates of Daghestan, Derbend, Shamakhi and Shirwan (all green).
    Adherbijan (purple) is shown inside the territory of Iran, south of the
    Araxes River.
    5 Vassily Vladimirovich.Bartold Ã?àáî&#xC 3;& #xB2;û ïî èñòÃ&#xAE ;&# xC3;°Ã¨Ã¨ Ã?àâê&#xC 3;& #xA0;çà è Ã?îñò&#xC 3;& #xAE;ֈ - îè
    Ã...âðî&# xC 3;¯Ã», Vol.2, Oriental Literature Press, Moscow, 1963, p. 703.
    6 Abdolali Karang, Tati wa Harzani,do lahjeh as zabane' bastane'
    Azerbaijan, Va'ezpour publications, Tabriz 1954.
    7 Dr. Saeed Oryan's website CAIS, at SOAS, London.
    2

    The anonymous author of the book goes on to claim that the Central
    Asian Turkic Oguz tribes of Aghkoyunlus and Karakoyunlus were
    Azerbaijanis, and furthermore, that the Persian Safavids, who were of
    mixed Iranian and Iranian-Azerbaijani heritage, were in fact from their
    country too. Here the author has inferred that Central Asian tribes are
    Azeris, while simultaneously confirming that Azeris are descendents of
    the Caucasian Albanians. Which of these two contradictory theories are
    we to believe?

    In spite of the evidence presented by Strabo that `the river Araxes
    runs through Armenia' and `the border of Armenia and Albania is the
    river Kura', the present book claims that no Armenians lived in the
    area of present day Armenia and Qarabagh, adding that the Armenians
    were settled in the territory of Azerbaijan by the Russians only after
    the 1813 and 1828 treaties with Persia, forgetting that since the early
    ages the area of The Republic of Azerbaijan was populated by peoples
    speaking Persian, Albanian, Taleshi, Armenian etc. and much later also
    Turkish.8 The Armenian Meliks, the Landlords, lived in the mountainous
    region of Qarabagh and due to their strategically invincible positions
    generally remained autonomous, even when the rest of the region had
    fallen under Russian and Persian rule. If the book is to be believed,
    the famous Armenian patriot Davit Bek, one of the political leaders of
    neighbouring Zangezur, is also of Albanian-Azerbaijani origin. So
    allegedly are all the Christians living in the vicinity of Qarabagh and
    The Republic of Azerbaijan, who are considered by the author to be the
    remnants of Christian Albanians. In addition to many other travellers
    who visited the region, Johann Schiltenberger9 and Joseph Emin10 have
    written about the Qarabagh Armenians in their travel narratives, dating
    from the 15th and 18th centuries respectively. Furthermore, the
    Cathedral of Holy Echmiadzin, just west of Yerevan, established in
    301-303 AD, has for centuries been the central and important religious
    centre for Armenians. It should be remembered that around 1603 the
    Safavid king Shah Abbas the Great forcefully relocated over 300,000
    (supposedly `non-existent') Armenians from Nakhijevan and Julfa to
    New-Julfa, a town built near Isfahan for the resettled Armenians, who
    were brought for their skills as craftsmen and international merchants
    to help the Shah in his ambitious improvement projects, where their
    descendants still thrive.
    Even the famous Qarabagh historian Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi
    (1773-1853) in his Tarikh-e Qarabagh (The History of Qarabagh) written
    in Persian between 1840 and 1844 states `In ancient time the town
    [Barada in Qarabagh] was populated by Armenians and other
    non-Muslims'11 and adds `During Safavid sultans of Iran the Vilayet of
    Qarabagh, its tribes, khamsa [five] Armenian mahals [districts] of
    Dizaq, Varandeh, Khachin, Chalaberd and Talish were subordinates of
    beglarbegi of Ganja'.12

    The book spares no effort to eradicate the presence of the Armenians
    from these territories, even claiming that the Armenian religious
    leaders, the various Catholicoi were Albanian. The Albanian people had
    a script, invented by Mesrop Mashtotz, which, due the scarcity of its
    surviving samples, are still in the process of being deciphered.13
    Evidence shows that all the inscriptions on the Christian monuments in
    the territory of Mountainous Qarabagh and The Republic of Azerbaijan
    are in the Armenian script and language, yet the book tries to convince
    the reader that somehow the local churches, where everything written is
    in Armenian, are not of Armenian but Albanian origin. To this end, the
    images of the churches and monuments are taken from a distance and are
    depicted in such a way that Armenian language inscriptions present, are
    indiscernible.
    8 Strabo, Geography, Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge, 1928. Book 11,
    Ch. 1,5-6 and Ch. 4,1-2.
    9 Johann Schiltenberger, Bondage and Travels - 1396 to 1427, Hakluyt
    Society, London, 1879, Chapters 62-64.
    10 Joseph Emin, My Life and Adventures, London, 1792. Chapters 17 to 26.
    11 Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi, Tarikh-e Qarabakh, Manuscript
    B-712/11603, Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan, p. 4.
    12 Ibid, p. 6.
    13 Koriun, Varq Mashtotzi (Life of Mashtotz), Yerevan State University,
    Yerevan, 1981, p.288-9. 3
    The conflict between The Republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan is put
    squarely on the shoulders of Armenia, conveniently omitting that it was
    the Azerbaijani army who started the conflict with the bombing of
    Stepanakert, the capital of Qarabagh, using aircraft and Grad missiles,
    destroying most of the town and killing hundreds of civilians.

    The author then laments the destruction of monuments and buildings,
    citing 1891 such instances (about which later). The ninth paragraph
    starts with naming the `Aghoghlan' (allegedly Albanian) cloister, whose
    faith is unknown to the author. This is in fact the famous 4-5th
    century church of Tzitzernavank, whose roof had collapsed in 1986 and
    which, since the liberation has been restored by the Armenians and is
    now an active church (see Fig. 2). It then goes on naming Amaras (4th
    century, built by Gregory the Illuminator), Gandzasar (built in the
    10th century, extended during 12th and 13th centuries and later) and
    Dadivank (Khutavank - churches built during 12th and 13th centuries)
    monasteries as being Albanian, while all the historic documentation,
    founding and dedicating inscriptions and carvings in these complexes
    bear witness to their Armenian origin.

    Fig. 2 -The church of Tzitzernavank.
    Restored by the Armenians. 2004.
    Prior to coming under the control of Qarabagh Armenians, none of the
    Christian monuments, Monasteries or tombs in that territory was
    protected. In fact most were systematically and intentionally damaged
    and destroyed and it is only after 1995 that the local Armenians
    started to restore them. One example is the monastery of Dadivank
    (Khudavank), whose importance is mentioned in page 8 of the book, yet
    as seen in the photo on page 80, under Azeri rule, it was left to decay
    and Armenian specialists have only recently restored some of the
    churches in this monastery to their original state (see Fig. 3 and 4).
    Yet the author includes Dadivank in the list and claims its fate to be
    `unknown'!

    Fig. 3 - Dadivank - as depicted in the book
    Fig. 4 - Dadivank in 2007. Partially restored. 4

    The Monastery of Gandzasar (in the book entitled `Ganjasar cloister')
    is treated in the same manner. The photograph depicted (page 16) shows
    the monastery as it was prior to 1993, that is, while under the control
    of the Government of Azerbaijan. This important and supposedly
    `Albanian-Azerbaijani' historic monastery was left to decay even
    though, if we believe the book, it is part of the Azerbaijani cultural
    heritage. When the control of the territory came into the hands of the
    Armenians, the complex was cleaned and restored, once again becoming an
    active and important religious centre (see photographs of Fig. 5 and 6)
    .It must be mentioned that during the war the Azerbaijani army
    bombarded the church with missiles, as a result of which one of the
    periphery walls was knocked down, revealing many hidden medieval
    Khachkars (Cross-stones).
    Fig. 5 -The Monastery of Gandzasar as shown in the book, prior to 1993,
    while in Azeri hands.
    Fig. 6 - Gandzasar as it looks today, after being restored and used as
    a religious centre.

    The list continues in the same vein. This persists re-naming and
    re-attributing all the major monuments and religious historic
    buildings, into the chapter on the `Religious architectural legacy of
    the Caucasian Albanians'. Subsequent chapters are dedicated to each
    `occupied' district, with some satellite imagery of the sites, small
    photos of the objects and a table of various monuments etc., with
    columns for their names, date, location, coordinates and present
    status. The lists include the following categories
    - Castles and towers
    - Churches and cloisters [monasteries]
    - Temples and pre Islamic monuments
    - Mosques
    - Caravanserais
    - Ancient and modern cemeteries
    - Bridges, springs and mills
    - Archaeological artefacts & Museums
    - Residential houses
    - Schools and theatres
    - Libraries
    - Social clubs
    - Houses of Culture
    - Other buildings

    The sum of the objects in the tables of various districts adds up to
    1891 items, listing everything from Cloisters [Monasteries] and
    Churches to Mosques and Houses, claiming that 1421 of these have been
    destroyed by the Armenians, the fate of the rest being unknown.
    Detailed study of the list reveals that 1189 of these allegedly
    `destroyed' objects fall in the category of Residential House, Library,
    Social club and House of Culture, few of them being identifiable, in
    the absence of names, coordinates or any photographs. For further
    clarification the chapters of the books were scrutinised with the
    following results.
    5

    1 - Shusha (or Shushi) District
    From the 167 allegedly `destroyed' Houses, Libraries, Social clubs and
    houses of Culture, only 67 have photographic representations. Curiously
    thirteen of these images show them as intact buildings with no apparent
    damage, such as those numbered 134, 187, 191, 231, 256 and others.

    2 - Kalbajar district
    The condition of the Gandzasar monastery is shown as `unknown'. This
    complex has been restored and is once again the focal point of the
    Armenian Church in the district. Given the publicity it has received,
    this fact could hardly have escaped the author's attention.
    From the 44 historic monuments and buildings listed, only seven are
    claimed to have been destroyed and the rest are classified as `unknown'.
    Out of 208 Houses, Libraries, Social clubs and Houses of Culture only
    five are shown on satellite photos. Moreover item 207 (listed as
    `destroyed') appears standing.

    3 - Lachyn District (Berzor)
    Out of the 137 listed Artefacts, Temples, Churches, Tombs, Springs etc.
    only 9 are claimed as `destroyed' and the rest are classified as
    `unknown'.
    Out of the 196 Houses, Libraries, Social clubs and Houses of Culture
    the status of only one is `unknown' and the rest are allegedly
    `destroyed'. Yet the satellite photos include only four of the listed
    buildings, object numbers 150, 151, 266 and 299. Item 299 of these four
    while being classified as `unknown' appears to be an intact structure
    on the photograph.

    The list pertaining to the remaining ten districts continue predictably
    in the same vein. Suffice it to say that from the 615 Houses,
    Libraries, Social clubs and Houses of Culture listed none have names or
    specific coordinates and only 25 have attendant satellite imagery
    and/or photographs, leaving the fate of the 590 in the hands of the
    anonymous author, who has chosen to classify them as `destroyed'.

    Some of the bridges shown as `destroyed' are most probably war
    casualties. It is not unusual for a retreating army to destroy bridges
    left behind, such that they are useless to the enemy. The retreating
    Azerbaijani army in all probability destroyed many bridges which are
    now claimed to be the `proofs of Armenian atrocities' and `war on
    culture'! It also lists a number of Mosques, especially in Armenia,
    which have been destroyed, conveniently forgetting that during the
    early Soviet era the Communists indiscriminately obliterated most of
    the churches and mosques in both countries.

    The book has four folding and one single page maps inserted in the last
    chapter of the book.
    1. Map No 1 is a Russian map dated 1823, where Armenia and Georgia are
    shown divided between Iran and Russia. The territory that is now The
    Republic of Azerbaijan is shown as the Khanates of Mughan, Qarabagh,
    Elizavetpol, Shaki, Shirvan etc. As in every map of up to 1918,
    Adherbijan (Azerbaijan) is shown as part of Iran located south of the
    Araxes River, confirming our earlier comments.

    2. Map No.2 is another Russian map dating from 1834, which shows the
    Russian Oblasts (Districts) of Armenia and Qarabagh. This map has no
    relevance to the book.

    3. Map No.3 shows the immigration of Diaspora Armenians into Soviet
    Armenia between 1921 and 1958. This is an irrelevant map, since the
    immigration claimed by the author supposedly took place during the
    first quarter of the 19th century.

    4. Map No. 4 dates from 1847, where the modern day borders of Armenia
    have been drawn on the old map. This is to show the changes of
    toponyms, but was it not the Soviet communists who had already changed
    almost all the toponyms in the USSR?

    5. Map No.5 is a map of the modern day Republic of Armenia.
    6
    Fig. 7 - Armenian Medieval
    Cemetery of Julfa/Jugha in
    Nakhijevan during 1998,
    before being destroyed.
    Fig. 8 - The same cemetery being destroyed by the
    Azerbaijani army.
    December 2005.
    Fig. 9 - The site of the old cemetery `converted' into a military
    target shooting range, Spring 2006.
    7

    Finally, what is perplexing to the writer is the following. During
    Soviet rule and after independence thousands of Christian monuments and
    artefacts in the territories of Qarabagh and The Republic of Azerbaijan
    were at best neglected and at worst destroyed, while after independence
    many mosques were rebuilt or restored. These acts of vandalism have not
    been witnessed or recorded by outsiders, since the borders were closed
    except in the case of the medieval Armenian Cemetery of Julfa (Jugha in
    Nakhijevan), where over 10,000 imposing carved tombstones (Khachkars)
    with Armenian inscriptions stood. In November 1999 observers from the
    Iranian side across the river Araxes noticed that some of the Khachkars
    were dislodged and broken up. Soon all were lying flat on the ground.
    The last phase of the destruction was completed in December 2005, when
    the regular Azeri army broke the Khachkars into pieces and dumped them
    in the river, building a military target practice field in its place
    (see Fig. 7, 8 and 9).14

    The question is the following: if these Christian tombstones were the
    cultural heritage left by the Albanian forefathers of the Azerbaijanis,
    why were they not preserved but destroyed?

    The very same question applies to the hundreds of well-documented
    churches and other Christian monuments that once dotted the territory
    of Nakhijevan (or Nachchyvan), as well as that of The Republic of
    Azerbaijan, which have now disappeared completely? Were they not
    Albanian-Christian monuments, the cultural heritage of the
    Azerbaijanis? Does one destroy one's own heritage?

    Finally, the CD-ROM insert is a rehashing of the abovementioned tables.
    Each district has an accompanying map, and a field, which should
    include the details and photographs of each building. The first section
    covers Shusha city, where 45% of the photographs are taken. However,
    even then, as regards Houses, Libraries, Social clubs and Houses of
    Culture, the information and photograph fields are mostly blank. For
    the following chapters, there are very few photographs and virtually no
    backup information to prove the claimed `destruction'.

    The DVD is again a repetition of the claims with some low quality
    images of the previous status of the towns and cities, once again
    putting the blame for starting the war and destruction on Armenia. It
    mentions that during the pre Soviet and early Soviet days, the
    territory of Armenia was expanded at the cost of Azerbaijani land - an
    `interesting' observation, since it was during those days that the
    Soviets annexed the territories of Qarabagh to Azerbaijan, while in
    1922 the districts of Kars, Igdir, Ardahan, Mount Ararat and other
    areas were ceded to Turkey and Nakhijevan was given to Azerbaijan.
    During 1931 more territories east and west of Zangezur were ceded to
    Azerbaijan, cutting off Mountainous Qarabagh from Armenia and further
    shrinking the area of Armenia to the fraction of its previously expanse.

    Rouben Galichian

    Author of `Historic maps of Armenia. The cartographic heritage' (2004)
    and `Countries south of the Caucasus in medieval maps' (2007).
    London, April 2008
    14 Photographs were taken by concerned Iranians from across the Arax
    River forming the border between Iran and The Republic of Azerbaijan.
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