Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 19 – Only a few thousand ethnic Russians remain in Dushanbe, even
though only a few decades ago, they made up a third of the population of the
Tajik capital and dominated its linguistic space, changes that have been so
rapid and dramatic that many have been disoriented by them, according to Nigora
Bukhari-zade.
National
censuses have tracked the declining share of ethnic Russians in all the former
Soviet republics, the result of the departure of many and differences in
birthrates between them and the titular nationalities. But it is at the
micro-level of individual cities and villages that this shift may be having the
greatest impact on the populations involved.
That
makes Bukhari-zade’s article in on the Fergana news portal today so important
because it tracks the rise of Dushanbe from a small kishlak numbering no more
than a thousand people in the early 1920s to a city of more than a million
today and the rise and fall of the Russian community within it (fergananews.com/articles/9099).
The
journalist spoke with Gafur Shermatov, a historian and activist, about the 20th
century history of the city, the role Russians played in developing it, and the
extent to which their role has now been forgotten along with the Russian language
by many young Tajiks one meets there.
Shermatov
points out that Dushanbe celebrated its 90th anniversary as a city
two years ago and that few know how small it was before that time. Indeed, the
neighboring kishlaks were in every case larger, but Dushanbe attracted people
because it had the largest bazar in eastern Bukhara.
It
was also the only place in emirate where the Bukharan Jews lived, a group that
played a key role, Shermatov says, is providing food to the local population
when the city was besieged by Enver Pasha’s forces in 1921. In the same year,
Emir Alimkhan made Dushanbe his capital and in 1922, Enver Pasha declared it
the capital of the khalifate he had proclaimed.
With
the arrival of the Red army, Russians began to arrive in large numbers, and
they continued to use Dushanbe as a political center. In 1924, it became the capital
of the Tajik ASSR and remained the capital of the Tajik SSR, although it was
known as Stalinabad between 1929 and 1961.
The next large influx of Russians
came during World War II, when more than 100,000 of them were evacuated to the
Tajik capital and when many wounded Red Army men were hospitalized there. For both, the city was a paradise at that
time, Shermatov says, because it was one of the few cities of the USSR where
bread was freely sold.
He adds that when he was growing up
there were “hundreds” of war invalids, many of them ethnic Russians, on the streets
of Dushanbe.
All these groups of Russians played
a key role in the development of the Tajaik capital, he says, but they have
been largely forgotten. Tajiks today remember national heroes from distant
centuries, but they forget those who played a major role in protecting them
from Turkic domination and promoting modernization.
One measure of just how large a role
they did play, he cotninnued, is to be found in the central city cemetery. There are more than 1.5 million Orthodox
graves, a number “larger than the number of residents of the city today.” Many Tajiks can’t believe that there were
once that many Russians in their city.
Shermatov says that he has mixed
feelings about the changes in the city.
The new construction is fine, he continues, but the destruction of many
of the Soviet-era monuments and buildings is disturbing, as is the fact that
some many Russians are leaving and so few Tajiks know about the Russian role or
even speak Russian.
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