Turkmenbashi forges a new, old nation in
Turkmenistan
EurasiaNet, February13, 2002
Taras KuzioTurkmenistan was one of the last countries to declare
independence from the Soviet Union, waiting until October 27, 1991 to hold a referendum on
the issue. Like most of the Central Asian states, Turkmenistan was forced to confront
independence unexpectedly, with the sudden collapse of the Soviet Union. Turkmen
independence did not have local political roots, and the country did not have a
counter-elite, drawn from dissident groups, ready to assume leadership positions.
Throughout the 1990s, things have stayed that way. Turkmenistan has led the way in
pursuing a top-down nation-building policy in Central Asia.
President Saparmyrat Niyazov has managed to build a personality cult
that tolerates no political opposition. Though Niyazov modeled his identity on Kemal
Ataturk, founder of the modern Turkish state, the Turkmen leader's policies are said to
conform to ancient traditions. His administrative reform divided the country into veloyat
(districts) and etrap (regions), rather than self-governing oblasts. The National
Assembly, which is composed of tribal elders, has veto power over the rubber stamp
parliament.
With Soviet iconography discredited, new state-building motifs have
emerged. Class and Marxist-Leninist ideology have yielded to a national idea that seeks to
unify the population around nationalist symbols and the glorification of the pre-Russian
past. State nationalism has filled the ideological void left after the collapse of
communism as a useful tool to build the newly independent state. Saparmurat Niyazaov, the
old Communist party boss, has anointed himself "Turkembashi," or father of the
Turkmen people.
Niyazov's brand of nation-building stresses unity and homogenization,
and looks askance at regionalism. The new national anthem is played each morning at
schools and factories as a way of reinforcing this new, collective identity. Still, the
Soviet legacy weighs heavily on the growing national identity. On Independence Day, for
example, military parades follow the Soviet-era model.
Niyazov has placed great emphasis on reviving ancient culture.
Anniversaries are celebrated with pomp and grandeur. May 18, the Day of Revival and Unity,
matches Independence Day in importance. State Flag day, unsurprisingly, coincides with the
birthday of the Turkmenbashi, closely linking together the "Father of all
Turkmen" with the ideology of the newly independent state.
That ideology also enforces isolationism and neutrality. Turkmen live
in small numbers in Iran and Afghanistan, but Turkmenistan is portrayed as the only true
homeland of the Turkmen. The World Turkmen Humanities Association strives to unite Turkmen
everywhere with their "true motherland," defined in ethno-cultural as well as
territorial terms. This again draws on the Soviet legacy, since the Soviets defined all
non-Russian republics as the homelands of titular nationalities.
Turkmenistan's isolationism, combined with its authoritarian
tendencies, has prevented citizens from learning about other cultures. As in other Central
Asian states, the re-writing of history is an important element of the nation-building
process. Soviet historiography has been discarded in Turkmenistan because Communist-era
textbooks portrayed the region as backward before the arrival of Russians colonizers.
This historiography, of course, had its roots in Stalin's fusion of
Bolshevism and Russian nationalism. Since it portrayed non-Russians as incapable of
surviving without the assistance of the "elder (Russian) brother," it has
yielded to other forms of nationalism. (Belarus and Moldova have reintroduced Soviet
historiography in schools.) In Turkmenistan, the Institute of History of the Academy of
Sciences has been renamed the Department of Independence and History. It plays a role in
promoting past glories, to establish that Turkmen lived well in pre-Russian "golden
eras" and can live equally well in the post-Soviet era. Over the past decade, many
streets have been renamed after characters drawn from Turkmen history.
The modern Turkmen state is portrayed as the descendant of the ancient
Parthian civilization, and the successor to its historic legacy. Turkmen are seen as the
indigenous inhabitants of the area and not, as Tsarist and Soviet history claimed,
newcomers. Turkmen have now been given a 1,000-year history with historic links to the
Oghuz Turkish tribes and the Seljuk. Notorious 20th-century events, such as the
anti-Soviet Basmachi revolt in the 1920s, no longer appear in a negative light.
Collectivization is now described in less glowing terms.
Islam is linked to the Turkmen nation-building process because it
provides an additional basis for an alternative identity. The number of mosques has
increased and religious attendance has grown. Nevertheless, as in other post-Soviet
states, Islam remains controlled by the state.
Editor's Note: Taras Kuzio is a research associate at the Centre
for Russian & East European Studies, University of Toronto.
EurasiaNet, February13, 2002
http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/culture/articles/eav021302.shtml
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