INDEPENDENT: Caucasian history textbook


Reply-To: [email protected]
Sender: [email protected]
From: MINELRES moderator <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 15 Oct 1998 09:26:51 +0300 (EET DST)
Message-Id: <[email protected]>
Subject: INDEPENDENT: Caucasian history textbook 

From: MINELRES moderator <[email protected]>

Original sender: Eldar Zeynalov <[email protected]>

INDEPENDENT: Caucasian history textbook 


The Independent (London)
October 4, 1998, Sunday
SECTION: NEWS; Page 17
 
Best of enemies rewrite history of hate; Armenians, Russians, Azeris
agreeing on the past?
Phil Reeves in Georgia observes ancient hostilities set aside for a
schoolbook
 
By: Phil Reeves
 
THE DAMAGE caused by history's meddling hand is barely visible in
Qazbegi, high in the Caucasus mountains. The 17,000ft snow-crested
volcano which rears above the town has been dormant since before the
fall of Troy.
 
Wolves, bears, and wild goats patrol the surrounding forests, moving
among the glaciers and jagged brown peaks of north-east Georgia, as
they have done for centuries. Yet, in this timeless place, history is
the topic at hand. Halfway up a hillside, in a stark government
chalet, a highly unusual meeting is taking place.
 
Gathered around a table are representatives of Armenia, Georgia,
Azerbaijan and Russia - fractious neighbours who have weathered
centuries of war, conquest, counter-conquest and local feuds as
empires swept in and out in an effort to control the strategic
territory between the Caspian and the Black Seas.
 
The meeting has the look of a mini-summit. National flags in miniature
and green plastic bottles of mineral water adorn the table-top. But
today, the talk is not of border disputes, or landmines and battles or
even of newly independent nations wriggling free from Moscow's
weakening grasp.
 
These officials have made a four-hour journey up a winding, deeply
pot-holed road which connects Georgia with nearby Russia to discuss a
small, yet intensely sensitive issue: the creation of a history
textbook for the children of the Caucasus. They have broadly accepted,
these academics and education officials, that a book should be written
that will help their teenage schoolchildren understand not only their
own national history, but that of the next-door neighbours.
 
Sound simple? Not here. Geopolitics, religion, rivalry and myth are as
thoroughly rooted in the soil as the Caucasus mountains themselves.
What would seem ancient history, a half-remembered trifle, to a
westerner is unsettled business in these parts. In particular, Moscow
is still regarded warily after 70 years of imperial rule that produced
Stalin (a Georgian), the KGB and widescale suppression of national
aspirations and human rights.
 
Thus, rules are required. The project is overseen by the Council of
Europe, which is leading a drive to reform history teaching across the
former Soviet Union as part of its general efforts to encourage
democracy and free thinking. The participants have received
"guidelines" stipulating that the book will "not be written in a
triumphalist, polemical or even vindictive" style. It should be
"neutral and realistic", and "free of ideological and political
stereotypes." Military issues - the region's countless wars - should
be "dealt with", but not with undue emphasis.
 
A cursory glance at the first two decades of this century reveals the
delicate path ahead. How should the book deal with the Bolshevik
Revolution, and the subsequent acquisition and control of the Caucasus
by the USSR? Or the war between Georgia and Armenia in 1919, or -
always the defining issue for the Armenians - the 1915 massacre of
their people by the Turks, friends of the Azeris?
 
And yet - though much wrangling seems inevitable - the signs are far
from hopeless. The driving force behind the project, known as the
Tbilisi Initiative, is Alison Cardwell, a dogged and defiantly
optimistic British official. She hopes to see the book in print by
2001. If all goes to plan, it will include sections on the history of
each of the four countries written - crucially - by a small group of
their own resident historians. Each country will be responsible for
telling its story as it would like its neighbours' children to see it.
This is far from an ideal recipe for thrilling history. But Ms
Cardwell dismisses suggestions that it will produce propaganda. "I
don't believe that will happen. I really think they will try their
hardest to do what they have been asked to do."
 
Even a whitewash will be better than nothing. The Soviet Union created
a vacuum, leaving millions ignorant of any but the Communist version
of history. Its mendacious textbook, A History of the USSR, contained
almost nothing about the Caucasian peoples or other non-Slavs on the
fringe of the Soviet empire.
 
The hurdles are high and plentiful. At this week's meeting, the
Armenians were clearly wary. And the Russians were struggling to grasp
the concept of "multi-perspectivity" - the idea that there is more
than one legitimate view of history, and that these may validly
contradict one another. But the first day of the three-day meeting in
Qazbegi, one of several stages towards publication, ended peaceably.
 
But in this divided region, merely getting people round a table is a
considerable accomplishment. Two of the participants, Christian
Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan, are locked in an unresolved conflict
over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, after a war in which 20,000
died. Relations between the two new nations could scarcely be worse
and remain one of several reasons for the region's instability (along
with Chechnya, two assassination attempts against Georgian leader
Eduard Shevardnadze and the unsettled conflict in Abkhazia).
 
At bottom, last week's gathering high in the Georgian mountains, was
about conflict resolution. "We have got to have a textbook at the end
of the day," said Ms Cardwell. "But getting countries to work together
is what matters most."
 
Copyright 1998 Newspaper Publishing PLC

-- 
==============================================================
MINELRES - a forum for discussion on minorities in Central&Eastern
Europe

Submissions: [email protected]  
Subscription/inquiries: [email protected] 
List archive: http://www.riga.lv/minelres/archive.htm
==============================================================