Hotmail  |  Gmail  |  Yahoo  |  Justice Mail
powered by Google
WWW http://www.JusticeForNorthCaucasus.com

Add JFNC Google Bar Button to your Browser Google Bar Group  
 
 
Welcome To Justice For North Caucasus Group

Log in to your account at Justice For North Caucasus eMail system.

Request your eMail address

eMaill a Friend About This Site.

Google Translation

 

 

Window On Eurasia: Caucasus Countries Mark 90th Anniversaries Of Post-1917...

posted by FerrasB on June, 2008 as Imperialism



Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Window on Eurasia: Caucasus Countries Mark 90th Anniversaries of Post-1917 Independence
Paul Goble

Vienna, June 10 – Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia have just commemorated the 90th anniversaries of their first modern declarations of independence, thus continuing the process of recovering an important part of their pasts and laying the foundation for their present and future existence as independent countries.
It has long been generally accepted that since 1991, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania have had an easier path than the former Soviet republics in large measure because they, unlike all the others, stressed their continuity with the pre-war republics and have thus been engaged in restoring that rather than creating something new.
Now, however, the three Transcaucasus countries by marking this earlier period of independence are insisting that they too have a specific past to build on, one that does not in the nature of things put them in the same position as the Baltic countries – their earlier experience was both shorter and more troubled -- but does set them apart from the other post-Soviet states.
In an article posted online last Friday, Sergei Markedonov, one of the most thoughtful Russian commentators on ethnic issues in the post-Soviet space, surveys this development, underlining some of the implications this focus on the post-1917 republics in that region has for their post-1991 successors (www.polit.ru/author/2008/06/06/caucas.html).
Each of the three countries in the southern Caucasus had a brief period of independence in the wake of the collapse of the Russian Empire. Georgian was independent from May 26, 1918 to March 18, 1921. Azerbaijan was independent between May 28, 1918, and April 28, 1920. And Armenia was independent from May 28, 1918, to November 29, 1920.
All three emerged with the collapse of the Transcaucasus Seim, the common body of the Transcaucasus Democratic Federative Republic, and the independence of each was ended by Soviet military occupation and the proclamation of each as a Soviet republic within what was soon to become the USSR.
The peoples of the region never entirely forgot their experience with independence, Markedonov notes, and both Georgia and Azerbaijan explicitly sought to “recover” their independence as they moved to exit from the disintegrating Soviet Union. Armenia in contrast explicitly chose to begin “from zero” by pursuing “a legal separation” from the USSR.
This effort to claim continuity, he points out, created certain problems because “the ‘restoration of statehood,’ as a theory and practice of the acquisition of independence was accompanied by the restoration of all those conflicts and contradictions which had existed during the period of the ‘first republics,’” conflicts which allowed Moscow to occupy the region.
Among the most serious of these problems, Markedonov says, were the absence of “clear and mutually acceptable state borders” among these states and ethnic conflicts, involving both the lack of autonomy and a lack of respect for ethnic and religious minorities, within their borders.
Indeed, the Moscow analyst insists, “the present border problem [between Armenia and Azerbaijan] is the result of the conflict of two nationalist discourses of the beginning of the 20th century,” which reached their greatest extent during the brief period of independence of those two nations.
(This problem is further complicated, he points out, by the fact that “the leadership of Nagorno-Karabakh … strives to base its pretences for independence not on the right of ‘the first republics’ but on the laws of the USSR about the right of the withdrawal of union and autonomous formations from the Soviet state.”)
If these problems and the fact that “not one of the first independent states of the Transcaucasus was fully recognized” by foreign powers – the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic was recognized de facto at the Paris Peace Conference – few would think it a good idea to talk about these first republics as something of more than historical interest.
But these three republics took several other steps that continue to matter in vastly more positive ways. It was precisely during their brief existence that these states introduced many concepts and structures of Western democracy, including “parliamentarianism, the need for elections and the legitimation of the authorities by elections, freedom of speech and civil rights.”
Azerbaijanis, for example, remain proud to this day that theirs was the first democratic republic in the Muslim world which not only gave women the right to vote even before the United States did but also, underscoring that country’s commitment to education, laid the foundations for Baku State University.
Obviously, the more than 70 years of Sovietization that these three nations experienced changed them in fundamental ways, and no simple restoration of the past is possible. But as Markedonov concludes, in the life of the Transcaucasus, this history remains “extremely important, especially since its lessons have not yet been fully taken into consideration.”
Posted by Paul Goble at 6:38 AM
 
http://windowoneurasia.blogspot.com/2008/06/window-on-eurasia-caucasus-countries.html


comments (0)


1 - 1 of 1



 RSS FEED


New Posts



Search Imperialism



Imperialism



Archive


 january 2015

 march 2014

 november 2013

 september 2013

 july 2013

 march 2013

 february 2013

 january 2013

 december 2012

 november 2012

 september 2012

 july 2012

 april 2012

 february 2012

 july 2011

 june 2011

 april 2011

 march 2011

 february 2011

 january 2011

 december 2010

 november 2010

 october 2010

 september 2010

 august 2010

 july 2010

 june 2010

 may 2010

 april 2010

 march 2010

 february 2010

 january 2010

 december 2009

 november 2009

 october 2009

 september 2009

 august 2009

 july 2009

 june 2009

 may 2009

 april 2009

 march 2009

 february 2009

 december 2008

 november 2008

 october 2008

 september 2008

 august 2008

 july 2008

 june 2008

 may 2008

 april 2008

 march 2008

 february 2008

 january 2008

 december 2007

 november 2007

 october 2007

 september 2007

 august 2007

 july 2007

 june 2007

 may 2007

 april 2007

 march 2007

 february 2007

 january 2007

 december 2006

 november 2006

 october 2006

 september 2006

 august 2006

 july 2006

 june 2006

 may 2006

 april 2006

 march 2006

 february 2006

 january 2006

 december 2005

 november 2005

 october 2005

 september 2005

 august 2005

 july 2005

 june 2005

 may 2005

 april 2005

 january 2005

 july 2000





Acknowledgement: All available information and documents in "Justice For North Caucasus Group" is provided for the "fair use". There should be no intention for ill-usage of any sort of any published item for commercial purposes and in any way or form. JFNC is a nonprofit group and has no intentions for the distribution of information for commercial or advantageous gain. At the same time consideration is ascertained that all different visions, beliefs, presentations and opinions will be presented to visitors and readers of all message boards of this site. Providing, furnishing, posting and publishing the information of all sources is considered a right to freedom of opinion, speech, expression, and information while at the same time does not necessarily reflect, represent, constitute, or comprise the stand or the opinion of this group. If you have any concerns contact us directly at: eagle@JusticeForNorthCaucasus.com


Page Last Updated: {Site best Viewed in MS-IE 1024x768 or Greater}Copyright © 2005-2009 by Justice For North Caucasus ®