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Hate Meets History In Cartoonist's Art

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  • Hate Meets History In Cartoonist's Art

    HATE MEETS HISTORY IN CARTOONIST'S ART
    Simon Ostrovsky

    iAfrica.com, South Africa
    Oct 6 2005

    Venom dripping from its fangs onto a Swastika, only the efforts of
    powerful arms grasping metal pincers restrain a black serpent and
    its desire for global domination, in a drawing displayed at a Baku
    gallery recently.

    This could be the description a World War II-era Soviet propaganda
    poster depicting the concerted effort of the allies as they hold back
    the menace of Nazi Germany and the Axis forces.

    But this poster - and others like it, recently on display in the
    Artists' Union in former Soviet Azerbaijan - are the recent works of
    an Azerbaijani scientist-turned-cartoonist.

    You may not have heard of it, but the author Kerim Kerimov is on a
    mission to blow the whistle on "Armenian hegemony." Slithering across
    a watercolour globe towards Azerbaijan, the serpent is Kerimov's
    metaphor for Armenia and its "Greater Armenia" policy while the six
    arms grasping the pincers represent Azerbaijan's Turkic brethren from
    Turkey to Turkmenistan.

    The president of Azerbaijan's National Geophysicists Committee,
    Kerimov is better known in oil circles for his role in the signing
    of the so-called "contract of the century."

    The mid-1990s Caspian Sea oil deal marked the launch of development -
    with Western participation - of Azerbaijan's sizable oil reserves,
    which Kerimov assessed on behalf of the Azerbaijani state.

    Few know of his prolific political drawings however, which have
    appeared in Soviet and later Azerbaijani newspapers for nearly
    50 years.

    Much of his work targets Armenia, against which Azerbaijan fought a
    bloody war, and in large parts complements the government's official
    information campaign against the Caucasus nation.

    Anyone in Baku will tell you that Azerbaijan has many enemies: Armenia
    with its Russian backing, Armenia's wealthy diaspora, Azerbaijan's
    own opposition forces and perhaps a few loose clerics from Iran.

    Kerimov goes further and puts the enemies into pictures, with horned
    and bewarted horrific caricatures of Armenians clawing at the map of
    Azerbaijan or driving a wedge between the country and its ally Turkey
    with a giant bomb.

    Schooled in the style of Socialist Realism in the days when both
    Azerbaijan and Armenia were constituent republics of the Soviet Union,
    the 72-year-old Kerimov is a self-described disciple of Russian
    WWII-era cartoonist Boris Yefimov.

    But if Yefimov is remembered for his drawings of a contorted Hitler
    in the pages of Soviet propaganda sheets, Kerimov has set his sights
    on tackling Azerbaijan's modern-day foe.

    "I don't want Armenians to see an enemy in me," he said however,
    claiming he has received death threats from Armenians and other
    "enemies" of Azerbaijan.

    "I want them to see that the policies they are carrying out are wrong;
    then life will be better for both peoples."

    But his stated peaceable intentions might prove to be a tough sell to
    Armenians, who in his drawings are alternately depicted as big-nosed
    hairy demons or sometimes white-hooded Ku Klux Klan members.

    from AFP http://entertainment.iafrica.com/artzine/news/498146.htm
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