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Stepan Shaumyan: Doomed To Oblivion?

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  • Stepan Shaumyan: Doomed To Oblivion?

    STEPAN SHAUMYAN: DOOMED TO OBLIVION?

    Vestnik Kavkaza
    http://vestnikkavkaza.net/articles/culture/25994.html
    April 27 2012
    Russia

    The All-Russian Azerbaijani Congress organized a presentation of a
    book by Azeri historian Eldar Ismailov "Stepan Shaumyan: doomed to
    oblivion. Portrait of the 'legendary communard' without retouch"

    As Mikhail Huseynov, secretary general of the All-Russian Azerbaijani
    Congress, told VK, the book which was presented yesterday is dedicated
    to the life and work of one of the twenty six "Baku commissars."

    "After you read this book, you will see that for such a long time in
    the Soviet period we knew him as a hero, but the facts, information
    and materials prove that he did a lot against the Azerbaijani people.

    The researcher Eldar Ismailov has exposed the figure of Stepan
    Shaumyan. Today we are presenting this book for your attention. I
    believe that Russian readers should also know about Stepan Shaumyan".

    Chingiz Huseynov, Russian and Azerbaijani writer, characterized the
    situation around the topic of the book by mentioning three contexts.

    'The first context is All-Russian, as I wanted to say, or even
    All-Soviet, but I will call it "Eurasian" context. This context
    represents opinions of the Russians and opinions of others. There
    is an Azerbaijani context, which became the background context of
    this work. There is also a context associated with the figure of the
    historian. I would like to talk about all these three contexts. First
    of all, Shaumyan for Azerbaijan is an unconditionally malicious
    figure. I have in mind the March massacre. In connection with this,
    for Georgians Shaumyan is also a negative figure, but they almost
    do not talk about him. For Armenians he is a complex figure. First,
    since they are rejecting the Bolshevik path, they are not proud of him,
    but on the other hand, he was not only born in Armenia, but he was also
    in contact with people who are considered national heroes in Armenia.

    'In Russia there is a complex attitude to Shaumyan, not only because
    there is a street named after the twenty six Baku Commissars, there is
    this issue, but I personally would not like this street to be renamed.

    For Azerbaijan... Russia certainly does not have a clear understanding
    of Shaumyan either. A colossal role is played here by the Armenian
    lobby, the powerful Armenian lobby in Russia, which existed in Soviet
    times and before that and I will not go deep into this subject. For
    Azerbaijan he is on the one hand a malicious figure. But on the other
    hand we should not... And I even had a thesis: in Baku newlyweds are
    taken to the Monument to the 26 Baku Commissars, which symbolizes the
    friendship of peoples. The brand of friendship of Armenians, Georgians,
    Azerbaijanis and Russian people including Fioletov, Dzhaparidze and
    Shaumyan had been developed very well. This brand worked well and
    played a significant role in developing an international consciousness
    in Azerbaijan, because in the Soviet times at all high and not
    very high levels I always heard: "Everyone knows that Armenians are
    nationalists, but Azerbaijanis are internationalists."

    'This thesis was present in all the spheres of state government. In
    fact, the Armenian lobby played a great role in those years as well.

    In order to prove my thesis I always say that Armenians take their
    newlyweds to the Monument to the so-called victims of the Ottoman
    Empire. In the course of decades Azerbaijan had been adopting the
    idea of internationalism, while Armenia had been adopting ideas of
    nationalism, including ideas of hatred, anger, and so on. I should also
    speak about the creative context of the historian, Eldar Ismailov. He
    is one of the rare - and I would like to repeat it once again - one
    of the rare, perhaps there is even enough fingers on this hand to
    count all of them, historians in Azerbaijan who, amidst the crisis of
    history, are trying to voice the objective truth and objectively talk
    about what happened. He has a great book, "The History of Azerbaijan."

    'With the collapse of Soviet Union, in Russia as well as other
    regions there is an ongoing preponderance of anti-historicism. The
    anti-historicism is on such a great scale!... For instance, Uzbekistan
    has published "The History of Uzbekistan." Everything that happened
    before the Soviet period is described in great detail, the Soviet
    period is entirely absent and with the president starts the new
    history of Uzbekistan. So amidst great myths... There were myths even
    in the Soviet period and the class-specific approach to history is
    mythical. We should know that the class-specific approach to history
    is mythical: we take what we need and we reject what we do not need.

    But nowadays there is a great mythologization of history and in
    Azerbaijan as well. I once again repeat that Eldar is one of the
    few who are trying to show the actual course of history, although one
    would never find an objective history. Perhaps there has never been any
    objective history, entirely objective. But Eldar Ismailov demonstrates
    his closeness to objectivity and that is the value of his book'.

    According to Stalislav Chernyavsky, Director of the Center for
    Post-Soviet Research, MGIMO, a book with such title is a great
    commitment, especially nowadays, when the elimination of myths about
    the lives of true as well as fictitious figures became especially
    popular. 'Historians offer great benefit, when they contribute to
    explaining, correcting and specifying perceptions from our youth about
    historical figures that played a significant role in the development
    of our countries. Certainly objectivity is very important and I hope
    that this book is objective'.

    The author of the book, professor Eldar Ismailov, also addressed
    the meeting.

    'We are all people of a certain generation who grew up with the movie
    "26 Baku Commissars." We have certain images, a beautiful image of
    Shaumyan. And they sank deep into our minds, and we remembered that
    Shaumyan. When I started to study the theme, I had that image of
    Shaumyan. However, it was very interesting. In general there were only
    two books about Shaumyan by two Armenian authors in Soviet times. I
    don't say they are bad. They are classical Soviet works written in
    a certain style. One of them is better, it was published in Moscow,
    another is weaker, it was published in Yerevan. There was one more
    book, unfortunately, that was published in Baku. It was worse than
    the two previous books. However, this is not the point. It was
    difficult to talk about it. But when I started to write the book,
    it was different times, different views, different approaches.

    'I was interested in who Shaumyan is. I made a conclusion that
    if Shaumyan in 1918 - as I'm sure that on September 20th he was
    killed, despite everything that is written and contradicts it,
    he was beheaded, it is a fact - survived, he would have been a
    typical Trotskyite. Shaumyan wrote two volumes of works. None of it
    contains information on whether Lenin... He loved Lenin. I agree. He
    communicated with Bolsheviks: Lunacharsky, Bogdanov, and so on. Even
    though he was the second person in the state, there is no mention that
    he communicated with Trotsky. It is impossible. I have read these two
    volumes of his works, I was reproached for it, but I managed to cite
    Shaumyan 107 times, only because I have read it. And as I have read
    it, I came to the conclusion that he was a supporter of permanent
    world revolution. He was confirmed. Lenin was confirmed too, but
    Shaumyan was a dogmatic inflexible politician. His activity failed
    from beginning to end.

    'He was a supporter of world revolution. But what did he suggest for
    the Caucasus? His program on the ethnic issue was described by Lenin
    as "a chirp from an Armenian henhouse." I don't lie, it is written
    in Lenin's collected works. It is an interesting appraisal of Shaumyan.

    Lenin didn't understand the ethnic issue, he had poor knowledge about
    the ethnic issue on the peripheries. Lenin proposed Shaumyan, as a man
    from the Caucasus, to write a work on the ethnic issue. He hesitated,
    and Lenin said it would be better if Makharadze wrote the work,
    and in the end Stalin did it. Stalin's "Marxism and the ethnic issue."

    Shaumyan wouldn't get through it, as his point of view was so dogmatic,
    he thought only regional autonomies could be in the Caucasus. It is
    an interesting point of view, and he stood for it till the end. Even
    though the Bolsheviks' session in 1917 focused on it, there was a
    different position at the April conference in 1917 on the possibility
    of granting autonomies. On April 1st, 1917, Stalin wrote a letter
    to Shaumyan: "Comrade Shaumyan, Muslims want autonomy. Give it to
    them." He heard that something was going on. In April, at a meeting
    of the two Bolsheviks in Baku, Stalin said that Shaumyan pitted the
    two ethnic groups in Baku against each other, it was not our position.

    'What had Shaumyan done? I wrote that it was a Nazi action. Of
    course, he didn't know about existence of Nazism. You know better
    than I when this notion appeared. The 7th Congress of Communist
    Internationals gave a definition of Nazism. That it is an expression
    of very aggressive positions of the bourgeoisie. But it went out of
    date. I don't agree with this definition, because Nazism needs another
    definition. Nazism is pitting people against each other on ethnic and
    religious principles. That is the most precise definition of Nazism.

    And Shaumyan is a pioneer of it. Not because he was a confirmed Nazi,
    but because he provided such a policy for improving his power.

    'There is an interesting moment in this context. Lenin appointed
    Shaumyan the Extraordinary Commissar for Caucasus Affairs in December
    1917. Stalin wrote to Lenin, who found himself in Finland in December
    1917. Stalin wrote: "Proshyan came to me" Proshyan was a left
    socialist-revolutionary and Stalin made a contemptuous remark "with
    his Armenians. They demanded autonomy for Turkish Armenia." Stalin was
    very contemptuous of the issue. The Decree of Sovnarkom on Turkish
    Armenia was called by Mikoyan "a senseless document." But that is
    another question. Shaumyan made a lot of mistakes. Lenin made the
    mistake of appointing Shaumyan as the extraordinary commissar for
    Caucasus affairs. The Georgians didn't recognize him, they kicked him
    out of Tbilisi. Then he returned to Baku, full of hatred for those
    who didn't agree with him. He had to make decisions.

    'The Bolsheviks didn't have a majority in Baku. They failed to win the
    first and the second elections. Why did he appear at the top of the
    Baksoviet? Because the democratic coalition was unconsolidated. They
    did not manage to agree between each other and decided he would be
    the head, as at least the central government supported him. It was a
    failing tactic. They all hated him. He couldn't control the situation.

    Why did he rely on Armenian armed groups? Because he had no other
    groups. Read the memoirs of Baikov, who was born in Baku and later
    migrated. He wrote about the mess: "What did he do, being the chairman
    of the Sovnarkom?! Mistake after mistake." It is disgusting how
    Shaumyan characterizes the government. He wrote about Zevin's wife,
    Kolesnikova: "She is a crazy madwoman. Her only merit is that she
    spent a lot of time in prison." On Karinyan, the future academician
    of the Science Academy: "An ignorant lawyer." And on other people.

    'Shaumyan is a political loser. He destroyed the Baku Bolsheviks
    organization ahead of the revolution. Nobody wrote about it. He was
    elected twice at the fourth and the fifth sessions of the party. Read
    verbatim records, Zhordania said: "How could you be elected from
    the Borchaly organization, if there are no workers at all? Where
    did you hold the conference?" The same thing concerned the fifth
    session. What a mess was in the party organizations, elections were
    held incorrectly. The Bolshevik party got the least number of votes in
    October 1917, but Shaumyan became the chairman of the Baksoviet. There
    were a lot of unclear moments which had to be studied.

    'I have been teaching the history of Soviet society for 35 years. I
    don't see a principle difference in writing about Shaumyan, Molotov,
    Kaganovich or Khrushchev. I'm interested in the history of Soviet
    society in general. It deserves to be studied. The Shaumyan issue is
    not about Shaumyan, but about the system that they established. If
    we have inter-ethnic conflicts and problems today, one of those who
    laid a firm fundament for these conflicts was Shaumyan with his crazy
    fantasies, misunderstanding of terms, and he dealt with things he
    shouldn't deal with, not only he, but many others too. The result
    is obvious".

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