Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Azeri Triangle

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Azeri Triangle

    THE AZERI TRIANGLE
    by Netty C. Gross

    The Jerusalem Report
    July 10, 2006

    Israel and Diaspora Jewry are deepening their own links with
    oil-rich Muslim Azerbaijan and helping the Azeri regime win friends
    in Washington. Critics scoff at talk of democracy in this Central
    Asian republic and see the specter of neighboring Iran clouding the
    rosy picture.

    On a crisp spring morning in mid-May a delegation of Israeli
    dignitaries and Russian Jewish functionaries gather solemnly in
    the pristinely landscaped national cemetery in Baku, the capital
    of Azerbaijan, an oil-rich former Soviet Muslim republic in the
    southeastern Caucasus region of Western Asia. As required by Azeri
    state protocol, the delegation is beginning its two-day visit by laying
    wreaths at the monumental tomb of Heydar Aliyev, the late Azerbaijani
    leader. A Soviet-era strongman and chairman of Azerbaijan's Communist
    party, Aliyev reinvented himself as a pro-Western pragmatist after the
    country won independence in December 1991, and served as president
    from 1993 until his death in the United States, where in 2003, he
    had gone for medical treatment after collapsing of a heart attack on
    Azeri television.

    This kind of homage to the leader is hardly surprising. Though he has
    been dead for three years, billboards around the country of 8 million
    are plastered with images of the beaming, clean-shaven, tanned face
    of Aliyev, who looks on the posters a lot like Giorgio Armani.

    Schools and parks are also named for Heydar Baba (Grandfather
    Heydar). Critics say that the cult of his personality reflects
    Azerbaijan's lingering totalitarian orientation, that the country is
    not a real democracy and that corruption and political repression
    are rife; supporters counter that Aliyev was genuinely popular,
    and that his regime stabilized the country and oriented its foreign
    policy toward the West.

    The itinerary also requires a visit to Martyrs Alley, a run-down
    cemetery a 10-minute drive away, where guests are given red
    carnations to place on the graves of some 132 young Azeris, including
    an 18-year-old Jewish woman named Vera Bessantina, all innocent
    bystanders killed in 1990 by Soviet troops sent in to put down unrest
    in the tumultuous dying days of the Soviet Union. The end of the
    crumbling Soviet empire also triggered war between newly independent
    Azerbaijan and (Christian) Armenia over the disputed area known as
    Nagorno-Karabagh, a predominantly ethnic Armenian enclave within
    Azerbaijan. The 1992-94 war claimed 30,000 lives; Azerbaijan lost 20
    percent of its territory to Armenian occupation, and 800,000 Azeris
    were displaced. Nagorno-Karabakh has declared its independence, but
    the enclave and territory conquered in the war remain under Armenian
    control, and have become the major issue on Azerbaijan's agenda.

    Taken together, the two cemetery stops offer a glimpse into
    Azerbaijan's psyche. And what they represent are at the root of a
    strong Azerbaijani-American-Israel-Jewish connection, a relationship
    that some critics warn will unravel just as Israel's romance with
    Iran did, and for similar reasons. The connection benefits everyone.

    In a world thirsty for oil and plagued by Islamic fundamentalism,
    energy-rich Azerbaijan has become an important U.S. strategic ally
    and partner in the war on terror in a region where Washington has
    few friends. Baku solidifies the link by allowing the U.S to use its
    airspace, and contributing troops to coalition forces in Iraq. To
    underscore the political trade-offs, Ilham Aliyev, Heydar's son
    and successor, was invited to the White House for the first time
    last April. Israel, too, is deeply interested in consolidating its
    relations with this secular oil-rich Muslim state, which was once home
    to an ancient Jewish community, most of whose members, some 80,000,
    have since emigrated to Israel and Russia. And Israel has seen it
    in its interest to encourage U.S. Jews to take up the Azeri cause in
    the Washington corridors of power, at the same time reinforcing the
    notion held by many Azeri and others in the Third World that the way
    to Washington leads through Jerusalem.

    There are other players as well: rich and influential Russian Jewish
    businessmen, some of whom have powerful contacts from the old Soviet
    days - and who proudly point out to me that Ilham's son-in-law has
    a Jewish mother and a Muslim father.

    Azerbaijan also sees the good relations with Israelis and Jews as
    reinforcing the image of a tolerant Muslim country. But Dr. Asim
    Mollazade, chairman of the Democratic Reforms Party, one of a handful
    of opposition parties, warns that Azerbaijan "is corrupt, and the
    enormous oil revenues are not reaching the people, who remain very
    poor. Those who can, emigrate. Islamic extremists are a great danger.

    Azerbaijan is Iran circa 1975." The U.S., Israel and Jewish supporters,
    he maintains, will be "deeply disappointed. They are fighting the
    wrong fight."

    The charges, though disputed, are not entirely unfounded. Azerbaijan
    got a poor score for corruption, political repression and prisoner
    mistreatment in a recent State Department report. And though Heydar
    Aliyev assured president Bill Clinton in 1997 that he would work
    to make Azerbaijan more democratic, his son, Ilham, now 45, was
    elected president in 2003, two months before Heydar died, garnering
    a too-good-to-believe 75 percent of the vote in balloting marked
    by allegations of serious irregularities. Elections in 2005 for
    the125-seat Azerbaijani National Assembly (the Milli Majlis) were
    similarly marred.

    But the United States, Israel and Diaspora Jews have chosen to ignore
    the warnings, and these days, the apocalyptic scenario is a minority
    opinion. "Mollazade's views are myopic," says Israel's ambassador to
    Azerbaijan, Arthur Lenk.

    In recent months, a parade of several high-level Israeli and Jewish
    delegations, who have been mobilized to help Azerbaijani interests
    in the U.S., passed through Baku, a city of 2 million dotted with
    a hodgepodge of elegant but neglected late-19th-century European
    structures, blighted Soviet blocs, and gleaming new "oil-money"
    high-rises. In early February, a 50-strong delegation from the
    Conference of Presidents of Major American Organi-zations was received
    by Aliyev. In April, the Azeri president welcomed Israeli tycoon Lev
    Leviev. Leviev, born in nearby Uzbekistan, heads his own non-profit
    organization, which has a Chabad-Lubavitch religious and educational
    agenda, and runs religious programs in much of the former Soviet Union,
    particularly in the Muslim republics of Central Asia.

    And in early June, Israeli National Infrastructures Minister Binyamin
    Ben-Eliezer arrived in Baku, to explore the idea of purchasing Azeri
    oil or gas at some time in the future.

    The star of today's delegation is Yosef Chagall, 56, a Baku-born former
    journalist and newly elected member of Knesset from the right-wing
    Yisrael Beiteinu party, who immigrated to Israel in 1977 and is making
    his maiden voyage back home as an MK. Azerbaijan's National Assembly
    also boasts its first Jewish representative, Yedva Abramov (though
    three of his children now live in Israel, Abramov says he did not hide
    his Jewishness on visits to Syria, Pakistan and North Korea). At the
    tomb Chagall, with Lenk at his side, lays the ceremony's first wreath
    on behalf of the State of Israel, which opened an embassy in Baku
    in 1993. That act of diplomacy hasn't been reciprocated, however,
    in part because Azerbaijan, though secular, sees a role for itself
    in the Islamic world as well as with the West.

    In June, Azerbaijan assumed the annual chairmanship of the Organization
    of Islamic Countries (OIC), and the organization's yearly meeting
    took place in Baku. Insiders say an Azeri embassy in Tel Aviv would
    be perceived as a "tease" to Iran, which is home to 20 million ethnic
    Azeris just across the borders established by Russia and the Western
    powers in the first half of the 20th century. Another example of
    the Azeri balancing act: At the World Conference Against Racism in
    Durban in 2001, which Israel and the U.S. abandoned in protest over
    anti-Israel sentiment, Azerbaijan was one of 10 nations that abstained
    rather than vote for or against a compromise motion.

    The motion eventually passed 51-38, to eliminate the charge of racism
    against Israel. And, in fact, Iran is a constant presence in Baku,
    say insiders, supporting, for example a large bookstore in downtown
    Baku known as Alhoda (Almighty), where one can buy religious books
    and framed posters of Iran's leaders from the stern-looking male
    sales staff.

    The second wreath is presented by regional leaders of the Euro-Asian
    Jewish Congress. (Each of the wreaths is the size of a semi-trailer
    tire, embellished with hundreds of roses, and satin sashes bearing
    gold lettering in the Azeri language.) A political NGO created by
    Jewish oligarch Alexander Mashkevich 15 years ago, EAJC is now a
    regional section of the World Jewish Congress, with offices in Moscow
    and Kiev and links with communities across Central Asia. Mashkevich,
    a former university lecturer in philology in Kyrgyzstan who made an
    estimated $1 billion in mining and banks and is known to have Azeri
    business interests, maintains homes in Belgium and Israel but is said
    by employees to "live on an airplane." In late June, Mashkevich was
    presented with an award from the Keren Hayesod fundraising organization
    by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.

    Underscoring the close ties between the Russian Jewish machers and
    the locals, EAJC operatives move about Baku's corridors of power like
    kings, freely initiating press conferences and government meetings,
    to the occasional discomfort of Lenk, who feels they are acting on
    their own rather than coordinating with the official representative
    of the Jewish state.

    Chagall seems to be expressing the view of both his new country and
    the EAJC leaders when, speaking to a gaggle of local TV reporters
    covering his return to Baku as an MK, he says admiringly, "Heydar
    was like Arik Sharon. He knew how to make the switch" from ideology
    to pragmatism when realities changed.

    Azerbaijan is sandwiched strategically between Russia, Turkey and
    Iran. With the latter it shares a 432-km border, religion and, with
    20 million Iranians, a common ethnic identity, language and history.

    For almost two centuries oil has determined - cynics say ruined -
    its fate. Discovered in the 1880s, Baku's oil fields dwarfed those
    of the same period in Pennsylvania, Texas and Oklahoma, and by 1901
    they were yielding more crude than all the wells in the United States
    combined. Russian rule, which had begun earlier, by conquest, in 1828,
    brought schools and a degree of modernity to Azerbaijan (Czarist-era
    buildings, some mutilated by the Soviets, still grace downtown Baku),
    but it also brought political repression and unsuccessful attempts
    to convert the Muslims to the Russian Orthodox Church.

    Still, in the last quarter of the 19th century, an educated Muslim
    elite, which believed that a modernized, secular Islam could be
    compatible with Western science and democracy, sprung up. Fueled
    by Muslim oil barons such as Shamsi Assadullayev (whose glorious
    Parisian-styled mansion at 9 Gogol Street in Baku was later subdivided
    into communal housing by the Soviets and was recently renovated by
    young Baku entrepreneurs), Azeri teachers, writers and poets forged
    a modern Azeri national consciousness, and ushered in a golden era
    of arts, literature and culture, which included the first operas
    written by Muslims. Late-19th-century Baku was a cosmopolitan city that
    included 11 mosques, four Russian Orthodox cathedrals, a synagogue, 12
    printing presses, a boy's and girl's classical gymnasia high school,
    and a special Russian-language school for Muslim adults, according
    to a 1997 book on Old Baku by Nazim Ibrahimov.

    The secular Muslims of that era ruled the independent Azerbaijan
    Democratic Republic, which was established in 1918-1920, in the
    wake of the collapse of the czarist empire and continues to inspire
    opposition leader Mollazade. "The idea that a Muslim can be secular,
    tolerant and democratic was established right here in Baku long ago,"
    he says. But it ended with the oil-thirsty Bolshevik conquest of
    Azerbaijan in April 1920. Baku crude was nationalized and dispensed
    free to Russia, neighboring Armenia and Georgia. A Soviet-era bronze
    statue depicting a woman throwing off her veil still stands in a
    downtown Baku square, ironically in front of a building occupied by
    the National Melli Bank of Iran. The Soviets eventually drove out the
    Azeri intellectual elite and repressed religion, a move that has made
    it more difficult for 21st-century Islamic fundamentalism to put down
    roots since independence. Indeed 70 years of rule by the Soviet empire
    left its mark on Baku, where after generations, some of the social
    distinctions between Central Asian Azeris and transplanted European
    Russians have become blurred. There are few mosques; pork and alcohol
    can be found in many restaurants; there's nary a headscarf in sight;
    and a constitutional law separating religion and state is firmly
    enforced. "I don't have any religious friends," says Fuad Akhundov,
    a 38-year-old Baku police investigator and popular local historian
    who moonlights as a tour guide.

    Azerbaijan had its second chance at independence after the Soviet
    empire crumbled. The republic's first democratically elected president,
    Abulfez Elchibey, saw himself as spiritual heir to the independent
    Azeris of 1918. But Elchibey was also an Azeri dreamer who studied
    the Israeli ulpan method with an eye toward phasing out Russian as
    Azerbaijan's official tongue and replacing it with Azeri.

    After two years Elchibey, who allowed Azerbaijan to slide into
    financial ruin and war with Armenia, was overthrown and Heydar
    Aliyev, speaker of the parliament at the time, assumed power and later
    consolidated his control in seemingly democratic elections. His rule
    brought stability. "Elchibey was too ideological, when he should have
    been practical," says Dr. Brenda Shaffer, director of research of
    the Caspian Studies Project at Harvard University who lives in Israel.

    Other experts have said the country needed a father figure, an
    assertion Molladaze finds belittling. "We were writing operas in
    1918. We didn't need Heydar Aliyev."

    But Aliyev proved to be useful for the West. In 1994, he signed what
    Azeris refer to as the Contract of the Century, which initiated
    the construction of the country's mammoth $4-billion, 1,093-mile
    Baku-Tbilsi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline, built with American political
    muscle and cash from a consortium of international firms. In July,
    the recently completed pipeline will start carrying a million barrels
    per day of Caspian Sea crude to Turkey's Mediter- ranean coast from
    Azerbaijan via Georgia, cutting down Europe's dependence on Russian
    and Middle Eastern energy. And it's a project that Israel is quietly
    hoping to benefit from some day, either as an end user of crude or
    by serving as a transit point for oil heading on to Asian markets via
    the existing 158-mile Eilat-Ashkelon pipeline (EAP), which was built
    in 1968 to carry oil in the other direction, from Iran to the West.

    Over lunch at the Philharmonic, a sun-splashed Italian restaurant
    near Baku's government complex, Ambassador Lenk, who was born in
    New Jersey, highlights points of cooperation. The weekly Azerbaijani
    Airlines flights between Tel Aviv and Baku are packed, and there are
    Jewish studies programs, with local and Israeli students and some
    Israeli faculty, at Baku State University. He points out that Israeli
    agro-businesses recently visited Baku for a bilateral trade forum, and
    that Israeli technology in telecommunications and waste management is
    being used in Azerbaijan. (In the past, Israelis have had financial
    interests in, among other things, Azerbaijan's second-largest cell
    phone firm, a hospital project and a turkey farm.)

    Azerbaijani religious tolerance has also allowed the local Jewish
    communities, which may number as many as 16,000 people (see "Depleted
    Ranks," page 27), to function openly, he says. For example, there
    are two Jewish schools in Baku, two synagogues and a recently opened
    Jewish community center. For its 58th Independence Day celebrations,
    the Israel Embassy hosted 1,000 people at a concert in a large central
    Baku theater, flying in Jewish Azerbaijani singers and musicians who
    now live in Israel.

    And then there's Sheikh Alla Shukur Pasha Zade, the Shi'ite spiritual
    leader of all the Caucasus region, also a carryover from Soviet
    days, who routinely accompanies Aliyev on his presidential visits to
    Islamic countries and is also happy to meet visiting Jews. A burly,
    friendly man who resembles TV character Fred Flintstone and wears
    a pointy Persian lamb's wool hat, he graciously receives us in his
    mint-green Baku palace, where male servants in socks serve tea, Azeri
    pastries and chocolates. "I wish all the best to the Jewish community
    in Azerbaijan. I am very close to them," Zade announces in Azeri to
    the delegation, whose members sit on elegant green gilt chairs.

    The sheikh, whose self-published biographical picture book also
    depicts him in warm embrace with Yasser Arafat, says that he sent a
    letter to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert wishing him good luck. Later,
    he tells me that the day after 9/11, he called a press conference to
    strongly condemn terror. As for Palestinian suicide bombers, he says,
    "killing innocent people is not acceptable by Islamic law. There's
    nothing to debate." To underscore his commitment to religious
    coexistence, he recently contributed funds toward the renovation of a
    Baku synagogue. "Why not?" he asks. "They needed help and we are all
    the children of Abraham," says the cleric, who leads the 60 percent
    of Azeri Muslims who are Shi'ites.

    Israel's main selling point with Azerbaijan is not Israeli. Rather,
    it's the American Jewish lobby, which, encouraged by Israel, has
    helped Azerbaijan in Congress. The background to the story is the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The anguish with which Azeris speak of
    their loss of the region and what they perceive to be international
    indifference to the tragic occupation of their land by Armenia
    cannot be underestimated. "Why is everyone just interested in the
    Israeli-Palestinian conflict and no one, not even fellow Muslim
    countries, cares about the loss of our land? And the Armenians
    are Christians," says Haji Zohrab, a 42-year-old trinket seller in
    old Baku. Foreign Minister Elmar Mammady-arov, a career diplomat
    whose perfect English was polished during the six years spent in
    Washington, says the conflict "affects every aspect of our relations
    with neighboring countries."

    A particularly painful sore point is Section 907, a U.S. congressional
    amendment to the 1992 Soviet Freedom Support Act, aimed at boosting
    economic and humanitarian aid to all of the 15 emerging former
    Soviet republics except Azerbaijan. Passed at the urging of the
    Armenian-American lobby in 1993, when the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    was flaring, 907 barred the U.S. from military or other cooperation
    with Azerbaijan. "Every child knows about 907, and it's on TV at
    least once a week," says Harvard's Brenda Shaffer.

    Encouraged by Israel, influential American Jewish groups have
    since acted on behalf of Baku as a bulwark against the powerful
    American-Armenian lobby in Congress and have tried to get 907
    repealed. Since 2002, when the U.S. needed Azeri airspace to reach
    Afghanistan, the U.S. has agreed to annual presidential waivers of
    907, which lift restrictions. Despite the temporary respites, Shaffer
    says that the U.S. is "apparently unwilling" to take any action that
    would give Azerbaijan "military parity" with Armenia. American policy
    toward Azerbaijan, which on the one hand courts Baku and on the other
    maintains a distance from it, Shaffer says, "is uncoordinated and
    doesn't make any sense."

    Mark Levin is executive director of the National Conference on
    Soviet Jewry, a Washington-based advocacy organization, a member
    of the coalition of Jewish groups that have worked on behalf of
    Azerbaijan's interests on Capitol Hill. Levin, who traveled to Baku
    with the Conference of Presidents in February, says the organized
    Jewish community has "worked closely with the administration to
    implement the presidential waiver of 907 in 2002, and the coalition
    "continues to express support on a regular basis for the waiver,"
    which is subject to annual review.

    The American-Armenian lobby in Washington "is very strong and
    organized, and speaks in a unified voice," Levin explains. "On other
    political issues we have partnered with [the Armenians], but when it
    comes to Azerbaijan, we are on different sides of the fence." While
    there may be "certain problems" with Azerbaijan's internal politics,
    Levin acknowledges, on the whole American Jewish policymakers feel
    comfortable in their strong support of Azerbaijan on the Hill and take
    their cue from the U.S. and Israel, which are themselves "promoting
    strong relations" with Azerbaijan. Levin interprets Ilham Aliyev's
    White House visit in April as a "very strong statement of support"
    from the Bush administration.

    "American Jews have helped us lobby in Washington against the Armenians
    and their help is very important. We are very appreciative," confirms
    Foreign Minister Mammadyarov. And Sheikh Alla Shukur Pasha Zade is
    unequivocal, telling the gathered delegation: "I know that Jewish
    groups have played a role against the Armenian lobby in trying to
    find a positive alternative to the conflict. I would like to express
    my gratitude to these groups for lobbying on Azerbaijan's behalf."

    An elegant man, clad in slacks, blazer and tie, opposition politician
    Asim Mollazade was an Elchibey supporter and Azerbaijan's ambassador
    to Iran in the early 1990s; he's also visited Israel, and has lectured
    at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. I met him at a dinner party
    in honor of Chagall at Lenk's home, attended by Baku's diplomatic
    corps and local Azeri pols. Later, he shared his grim outlook over
    cappuccinos at the nearby luxury Baku Hyatt hotel complex, home to
    diplomats and foreign businesspeople anxious to cash in on the energy
    boom, from which, he claims, Azerbaijan only receives 10 percent of
    oil royalties. (Amit Mor, an independent Israeli energy consultant,
    calls Mollazade's estimate too low. He says that with taxes and other
    fees, Azerbaijan likely collects closer to 50 percent of royalties.)

    Mollazade, a political scientist, blames the U.S. and others who
    supported Ilham Aliyev, including the American Jewish lobby, which
    he laments "played a negative role." In 2003, he argues, Azerbaijan
    should have been pressured to have open, democratic elections.

    Instead, according to a Human Rights Watch report, the Azeri government
    "heavily intervened in the campaign process in Ilham's favor," stacking
    the Central Election Committee with local supporters, banning NGOs from
    monitoring the vote, and preventing public participation in oppositions
    rallies. "With all our oil, secular Muslim outlook and high level of
    education, we could have been a model nation," he insists. "Instead
    we created a few rich oligarchs, and got a big dose of repression
    and those ridiculous posters of Heydar Aliyev everywhere. It makes
    me sick to look at them."

    Mollazade recalls a violent October 16, 2003, crackdown on opposition
    groups by pro-government forces two weeks before Ilham Aliyev's
    election. And he says that academics supporting the opposition
    (which he says boils down to just five or six people in the 125-seat
    National Assembly) are still blacklisted from university positions;
    he includes himself in this category. "I am barred from teaching in
    the university here," he says.

    In drawing parallels with Iran, Mollazade says that in the second
    half of the 1970s, Iran had $22 billion in annual oil revenue but
    it only benefited the Shah and his government. "The same thing is
    happening here." Azerbaijan, he says, is taking $1 billion in annual
    oil revenues, a figure expected to reach $5 billion by 2010, "but
    nothing has trickled down." The average take-home wage in Azerbaijan,
    he points out, is a meager $50 per month; 42 percent of the country
    lives below the poverty line; health insurance is practically
    nonexistent; and roughly 3 million Azeris have emigrated, mostly to
    Russia. And while Azerbaijani law bars religious parties from running
    for office (including the Islamic Party of Azerbaijan, formed in1992),
    Mollazade says the writing is on the wall. He predicts that "trouble
    will come from Islamic extremists. Go to the mosques on Friday. They
    are getting fuller each week."

    Azerbaijan has also felt the presence of world jihad. In April,
    according to the Anti-Defamation League, an Azeri court convicted
    16 Al-Qaeda militants of premeditated murder and other charges in
    the killing of an Azeri policeman. The terror cell, which reportedly
    trained in nearby Georgia, was apparently headed for operations against
    the Russian forces in Chechnya, another of Azerbaijan's neighbors.

    Mollazade believes that "the magic moment for democratic change
    passed and we lost time," and that in a few years, he himself will
    be against democratic elections in Azerbaijan because that will bring
    on the ayatollahs. Look what happened in Palestine and in Iraq."

    But Shaffer, who knows and likes Molla-zade, think his pessimism
    is overstated. Speaking broadly, she says oil-producing societies,
    such as Azerbaijan, often have problems of corruption. "It happens
    in democratic societies too. There's just too much money floating
    around." Aliyev, she points out, is taking steps in the right direction
    and she is particularly encouraged by his "professional" appointments.

    Ticking off a list, she says, "The head of the state oil fund
    is a Harvard grad, full of motivation and a gem. The minister of
    communication studied all aspects of the issues, even coming to Israel
    to study privatization here. The foreign minister is a savvy diplomat
    who knows Washington." Shaffer says corruption is hard to measure in
    countries like Azerbaijan, where there is a strong cultural imperative
    to assist one's relatives, a concept Westerners view as corruption,
    but Azeris consider a moral duty. Also, she points out that high
    corruption ratings in international indices are sometimes indicative
    of an open society where people don't fear telling the truth. "In
    Syria there's no corruption," she says ironically.

    Shaffer agrees that much of Azerbaijan, especially in the periphery,
    is poor and that more rural people are leaving their homes to try
    their luck in the cities. But one indicator signaling that life
    has improved somewhat is reflected in the lifestyle of a socially
    "unconnected" Azeri family with whom she has lived intermittently for
    over a decade. "They didn't have running water in 1997; now they own a
    large apartment with a computer, and their son studies at univer-sity,"
    she says.

    The 42-year-old San Francisco-born Shaffer, who immigrated to Israel at
    age 18 and developed a passion for Azerbaijan because of its tolerant
    Muslim ethos, also disputes Molla-daze's assertion that Israeli
    and American Jewish support was misguided. "Azer- baijani religious
    tolerance," she says, "is real, and considering what's going on in the
    world today, is extraordinary. Not only is it Muslim Shi'ite, it's
    one of the few places in the world where a Jew or Israeli can visit
    and feel completely normal and accepted." Indeed trinket-seller Haji
    Zohrab, a religious Muslim who recently returned from the pilgrimage to
    Mecca, is hard-pressed to say anything anti-Israel. "I watch CNN and
    see the bloodshed" between the Israelis and Palestinians, he told me
    in the course of a lengthy conversation in in his cluttered, rug-filled
    Baku shop. "I am pained to see the loss of life on both sides."

    Foreign Minister Mammadyarov, for his part, doesn't deny that
    Azerbaijan is plagued by corruption or the perception that it lacks
    democracy. "We have problems and we are trying to confront them. We
    are a young country." Lenk too prefers to dwell on the pragmatics
    of Azerbaijan's political reality. "They are a small state in a very
    difficult neighborhood," he says, adding, "not unlike Israel."

    Historian Fuad Akhudov, like Molladaze, takes pride in the Azerbaijani
    renaissance of the early 1920s. He and I spend an afternoon wandering
    around downtown Baku, where many sidewalks are crumbling and traffic
    lights are practically nonexistent, making it dangerous to cross
    a street. His passion for Baku is evident in the heavy folder
    of historical postcards he carries. The propensity for accepting
    authoritarian regimes, from the Russians of the 19th century to the
    Soviets and others of the 20th, he says, is a tragedy rooted in the
    national character, which he calls, "peaceful and accepting."

    Akhudov and I sit in a park studying the elegant structures erected
    in the late 19th century by oil baron and philanthropist Zeinalabdin
    Tagiev, which are now part of a local Baku college. We also explore
    the baronial home of Shamsi Assadullayev, on Gogol Street (in fact,
    most Russian street names have been replaced), and are shown around
    by a Russian woman who lived there in Soviet times, in a communal
    apartment carved out of a grand dining room. "A Jewish family once
    lived there," she says, pointing to a room near the kitchen, "but
    they left for Israel." The woman has since managed to consolidate the
    apartment, which she rents for "many hundreds of dollars" per month,
    attesting to the growing demand in Baku for attractive housing.

    At the trendy Picasso cafe, Akhudov, who respectfully put on a skullcap
    when visiting the local synagogues with me, says he feels "indebted"
    to Azerbaijan's Jews. "They were the intellectual elite in Baku,
    the best doctors, musicians. But most have gone. It's sad."

    Shaffer notes what she calls "positive anti-Semitism," in which Jews
    are idealized, is widespread in Azerbaijan. "Jews are assumed to be
    the smartest in the class." With most of Azerbaijan's Jews now gone,"
    she says, a whole generation of Azeris will grow up without knowing
    them or valuing them. It concerns me."

    Akhudov says he's now planning to emulate the Jews and emigrate too.

    He's thinking of Canada. He doesn't speak directly against the
    government but says he feels as if he has no future in Azerbaijan.

    Their pace of improvements, he says diplomatically, is too slow. "And
    we Azeris are too patient."

    Depleted Ranks

    By Netty C. Gross

    Three hundred students, 80 percent of them Sephardi, are enrolled at
    the Orthodox co-ed Or Avner Chabad Educational School, which opened
    in 2002 in a walled-off complex in Baku, where most of Azerbaijan's
    estimated 16,000 Jews live. The school - whose $1-million budget is
    covered in full by Israeli tycoon Lev Leviev - is popular, in part
    because of its full-day mixed secular and Jewish curriculum, and its
    freshly cooked lunches, but also because it charges no tuition.

    Admission requirements are liberal, though applicants are asked if
    their mothers are Jewish. Forty percent of the pupils are of mixed
    Jewish-Muslim parentage, creating some unique problems, reports
    school rabbi Meir Bruk, who is also Azer- baijan's chief Ashkenazi
    rabbi. Two years ago, about a dozen students "fasted on Yom Kippur
    for their mothers, and during Ramadan for their fathers," and last
    year two maintained both fasts. "Kids who study here have a more
    pronounced Jewish identity," he says.

    In fact, the mixed-marriage pupils get a break when it comes to
    prayer, which is forbidden at all schools by Azerbaijan's laws
    separating religion and state. Surprisingly Bruk, who says his
    pupils are generally not from observant homes, isn't bothered by the
    restriction. "Those rules are directed at Islamic fundamentalists
    who are trying to stir up trouble here, not us. We are very patriotic
    Azeris."

    At the same time a pronounced nationalist and Zionist ethos,
    underscoring the close ties between Azerbaijan and Israel, wafts
    through the cheerful corridors of the immaculate main building. Walls
    are covered with student artwork relating to Israel; flags of
    Azerbaijan and pictures of its president are proudly displayed.

    There's also a prominent memorial dedicated to Albert Agranov, a young
    Azerbaijani Jewish conscript who died in 1992 in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    conflict.

    With support from overseas provided in some cases by Azeri Jewish
    emigrants or American Jews, several new Jewish projects have opened
    in recent years. The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee,
    for example, has raised millions of dollars for a new JCC-style Jewish
    Community House in Baku, which also received Holocaust restitution
    grants from the New York-based Claims Conference.

    According to its director, Meir Zizov, 110 elderly Holocaust survivors
    or refugees from the Nazi regime and from other parts of the former
    Soviet Union receive assistance. In 2003, Leviev and others renovated
    Baku's Ashkenazi synagogue, which is mainly used by foreigners and
    visitors.

    Against all this vibrancy stands the old Mountain Jew synagogue in
    Baku, which once served the city's dominant community of Jews from
    the Caucasus. Unlike its Ashkenazi counterpart, the synagogue is old
    and traditional; the beadle, or shamash, politely asks me to don
    a headscarf before entering the main sanctuary, with its ornately
    decorated Torah ark. Though neat and well-cared for, there is a
    sadness here. Each seat in the U-shaped pews is marked by a miniature
    hand-woven carpet, but the shamash laments that "our community is
    almost gone." Of his 10 siblings, he's the only one left in Baku;
    all the others have moved to Israel.

    His lament takes on special poignancy when I visit the Jewish Agency
    headquarters in Baku, a large, airy building with sky-blue walls.

    Wandering around the cheerful structure, which is staffed by young,
    hip-looking Azeri Jews in jeans who listen to loud American rock music
    while they work, I find a packed classroom of adults who are studying
    Hebrew with an eye toward aliya. One man says that he knows the dangers
    of life in Israel, "because your Muslims are not peaceful like ours,"
    but he wants a "better life for my children. There is no future here."

    Emigration to Israel, Russia and Germany has decimated the Jewish
    community of Azerbaijan - there are today an estimated 10,000 to
    16,000 Jews, down from some 80,000 until the early 1990s. Indeed,
    the dilemma facing those remaining is whether to stay behind and
    help bolster Jewish identity or to emigrate. One of the ironies of
    the Jewish exodus is that Jews "have more options than ever here,"
    says Prof. Michael Chlenov, Moscow-based secretary general of the
    Euro-Asian Jewish Congress.

    There are about twice as many Mountain Jews as Ashkenazim, and Baku
    also has about 500 Jews from nearby Georgia. Local legend has it that
    the Mountain Jews, who speak their own dialect called Judeo-Tat, are
    descended from the 10 lost tribes who were exiled from Israel in 722
    BCE and settled in the Caucasus Mountains. Some local Mountain Jews
    tell a different story: that their forefathers emigrated from what
    is now Iran in the mid-18th century and established Krasnaya Sloboda,
    around the city of Quba in the highlands of northern Azerbaijan.

    According to some accounts, all-Jewish Krasnaya Sloboda once had a
    population of as much as 18,000; after World War II and emigration,
    only 4,000 remain. Occasional anti-Semitic acts, including a pogrom
    in the 1920s, have marred generally peaceful relations.

    European Ashkenazim arrived in Baku in the early 19th century, after
    the annexation of Azerbaijan to Russia. Members of the professional
    elite, most of the Ashkenazim live in Baku. Mountain Jewish businessmen
    who prospered in the capital have moved on to Moscow, Chlenov says.

    Jews started drifting out of Azerbaijan in the mid-1970s but emigration
    reached its peak in the early 1990s. The Azeri government says it
    still keeps an eye out for its native sons and daughters.

    Over an elegant fish dinner at the chic Aqua Marine restaurant in Baku,
    Nazim Ibrahimov, the dapper Muslim chair of the state's committee
    on Azerbaijanis living in foreign countries, says his office gets
    regular updates on Jews in Israel. "I know they have some problems
    and we have it on our agenda," he says vaguely, referring to the
    immigrant experience of Mountain Jews in Israel, which has been
    plagued by unemployment, crime and other social ills.

    I ask how safe Jews are in Azerbaijan, pointing out that all the
    Jewish institutions in Baku appear to be protected by armed guards.

    Ibrahimov says the security is "just a precaution." Matvey Elizarov,
    vice president of the World Congress of Mountain Jews, adds that Jews
    walk freely around Baku with kippot on their heads. "The tolerance
    is real," he says. And even if it isn't, says another well-connected
    dinner participant, "it's good for the Azeris to think it is."
Working...
X