CULTURE THAT UNITES RATHER THAN DIVIDES

Text and photographs by Onnik James Krikorian

The ethnic Armenian-run “Azeri Tea House” in Tbilisi, Georgia © Onnik James Krikorian

Like Sergei Paradjanov, whose last film before his death in 1990 was based on an Azeri love story and filmed in Azerbaijan despite the rising tensions, Sayat Nova was very much a cultural figure for the entire Caucasus and not restrained by national ideology or borders. The legendary bard wrote most of his songs in Azerbaijani, then the lingua franca of the region. Indeed, a statue of Paradjanov can also be found nearby, as can a monument to Sayat Nova, although it’s a mainly ethnic Azeri area of Tbilisi, and soon the location of a new Azerbaijani Embassy overlooking Heydar Aliyev Park.

A street in the mainly ethnic-Azeri town of Marneuli named after Sayat Nova, an ethnic Armenian troubador © Onnik James Krikorian

 

The perpetual dispute over food is nowhere to be found in the ethnic Armenian-Azeri co-inhabited village of Tsopi, with ethnic Armenian and Azeri children celebrating the birthday of a 6-year old Azeri child at a table full of regional dishes such as dolma. As one writer, Ağarəhim, wrote, “Dolma yeyənindi, Sarı Gəlin oxuyanındı (Dolma belongs to those who eat it, Sarı Gelin belongs to those who sing it).” That could never ring truer than it does in villages such as Tsopi © Onnik James Krikorian

Ethnic Azeris prepare for a wedding in the co-inhabited village of Tsopi. Ethnic Armenian neighbours were also invited to attend. Photo © Onnik James Krikorian 

LATEST BLOG POSTS

Pashinyan’s Constitutional Gambit

Pashinyan’s Constitutional Gambit

Reforming the constitution of any nation is inherently challenging, but in Armenia it has always proven particularly controversial. Introduced by referendum in 1995 under then President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the current constitution has been amended twice by his successors – Robert Kocharyan in 2005 and Serzh Sargsyan in 2015.

Roadblock to peace: the geopolitical quagmire of the “Zangezur Corridor”

Roadblock to peace: the geopolitical quagmire of the “Zangezur Corridor”

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the 1994 ceasefire agreement that put fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces over the Soviet-era mainly ethnic Armenian Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO) on hold – or at least until it escalated into war in 2016 and more devastatingly in 2020. Despite the involvement of international mediators, peace remained elusive despite occasional claims to the contrary. The sides were said to have gotten close, but never enough to prevent tens of thousands dying in over three decades of conflict.

Baku, Yerevan, and Moscow Clash Over Regional Transit

Baku, Yerevan, and Moscow Clash Over Regional Transit

In my first piece for The Jamestown Foundation, I again look at the continuing geopolitical impasse on attempts to restore economic and  transport links in the region following the 2020 Armenia-Azerbaijan war as per the trilateral ceasefire statement that ended it.  This is a topic that I’ve covered consistently since the beginning of 2021 but it has particularly come to a head now as hopes for a framework agreement between Baku and Yerevan persist.