|
On December first, when Armenia had not yet been sovietized, the
formal session of the Baku Soviet took upon the issue of the "Sovietization
of Armenia." Ordzhonokidze, the military commissar of the 11th
army, orated: "Comrades, it will indeed be difficult to find
a more auspicious gathering than this . . . Today, in this hall,
the Baku proletariat welcomes the birth of the Soviet Armenian Republic
..."
At the same meeting, the president of the Revolutionary Committee
of Azerbaijan, Nariman Narimanov, read out the declaration of the
Revkom [Revolutionary Committee], in which it was slated that Soviet
Azerbaijan is graciously ceding Mountainous Karabagh, Zangezur,
and Nakhichevan to brotherly Armenia.
For Ordzhonokidze, this too was an occasion for high oratory:
"Comrades, the appearance of Comrade Narimanov at this meeting
is very dear. He read to us his declaration. The names of Zangezur,
Nakhichevan, and Karabagh are alien to Russian ears. Zangezur, all
bare mountains, has no bread or water. There is nothing there. As
for Nakhichevan, it is all made up of malaria-ridden swamps and
nothing else. And what is there in Karabagh? Nothing. And now Comrade
Narimanov states: 'Take these for you. Take those infertile lands
for Armenia.' It was as though Azerbaijan was getting rid of an
extra burden. Yet,
in those infertile lands, in the Caucasus, resided the knot of
the so called Armeno-Muslim conflict."
Ordzhonokidze, recalling the bloody Armeno-Turkish clashes of
the Tsarist era, continued, "And today the leader of the Azerbaijan
Republic enters the scene and declares that, 'The conflict belongs
to the past . . . ' This is an act of great significance, one which
is unprecedented in the history of mankind."
Eventually it became clear that neither Narimanov's nor Ordzhonokidze's
speeches were sincere; rather, they had the intention of deceiving
the Armenian bolsheviks and the public in general. Karabagh and
Nakhichevan remained and still continue to remain under Azerbaijani
rule. A deceit which, indeed,"is unprecedented in the history
of mankind."
Stalin, too, expressed his fascination regarding this event. "On
December 1st," he wrote in the December 4th issue of Pravda.
"Soviet Azerbaijan is willingly turning over to Soviet Armenia
Zangezur, Nakhichevan and Mountainous Karabagh . . . The centuries-old
animosity between Armenia and the surrounding Muslims was solved
by one stroke, by the establishment of brotherly harmony among the
proletariats of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey."
[Simon Vratzian, Republic of Armenia, p.500]
|