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{{about|1918 massacres of Azeris|Polish student and intellectual protests of 1968|1968 Polish political crisis}}
March 31 is the genocidal day of the Azerbaijanis.
{{Infobox military conflict
March 31 has been celebrated as the genocidal day of the Azerbaijanis at the state level in the Azerbaijan Republic since 1998. This is a manifestation of national memory to tragic events – happened in the history of the Azerbaijani nation and state in the last century. Massive massacres, exile, deportations, repressions of the Azerbaijanis are the most tragic and horrifying pages of the history of the 20th century. Tracks of Armenian chauvinists, who are involved with ‘‘Great Armenia’’ idea and do any tact in order to achieve this endeavor, could obviously seem in this tragic history of the Azerbaijani nation.
| conflict = March Days
The historical certificate
| partof = [[Russian Civil War]]
Azerbaijan, one of the oldest residences of the human beings, is a state – has old rich history. The finding of one of the initial human residences in Azykh cave in the Azerbaijani territory and other residences belonging to the Old Stone Age prove this visually.
| image = [[File:Azerbaijani victims in Baku.jpg|300px]]
Development of a state system in Azerbaijan has long history. The creation and development of Mannea (the 9th century B.C.), Midiya (the 6th century B.C.), Atropatena and Albania (the 3rd – 5th centuries) states; spread of the Christian religon; creation of the Albanian alphabet in the 5th century; being joined to the Arabic Caliphate; spread of the Islamic religion (the 8th century); substitutions of the Black Sheep Turkomans, White Sheep Turkomans, and the Safavid dynasty subsequently are the pre-historic pages of this history. Baku, Karabakh, Quba, Shamakhy, Shaki, Iravan, Nakhchivan khanates arose in the Azerbaijani territory in the 18th century, as a result of efforts of the states - had taken ‘‘divide and rule’’ principle as a main fact in order to conquer Azerbaijan. Worsening of relationships with Iran, Turkey, Russia in the 18th – 19th centuries, and the wars - done for occupying Azerbaijan left a tragic track in the destiny of the Azerbaijanis.
| caption = Azerbaijani victims in Baku
After Russian emperor – Pyotr I entered into the Nishadt peace contract with the Swedish government in 1721, he pointed his attention to the Caucasus and territories adjoining to the Caspian Sea. As a result, Baku was occupied in 1723. Since Pyotr I came across with resistance and avoidance of the local population – primarily consisted of Muslims, he thought that it was necessary to move Armenians and Christians to Gilan, Mazandaran, Baku, and Darband despite any hardness in order to achieve his intention. This policy, had been founded by Pyotr I, was being followed by other Russian emperors subsequently. Yekaterina II made a statement about patronizing Armenians in 1768. In1802 Alexandr I wrote a letter to a Caucasian governor – N.D. Sisianov: “Armenians with any efforts… have to benefit from one or more of the Azerbaijani khanates.” Armenians, being a tool of making Russian plans to come truth in the Caucasian territories, tried to benefit from this condition for their endeavors and made efforts create a state that they did not own in the 14th – 19th centuries.
| date = 30 March – 2 April 1918
The horrendous history of the massive massacres
| place = {{flagicon image|Flag of the Transcaucasian Federation.svg}} [[Baku]], [[Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic|Transcaucasian Federation]]
The Gulustan and Turkmanchay contracts (12 October 1813, 10 February 1828), were signed at the end of the first and second Russian – Persian wars (the 1804 – 1813s, the 1826 – 1828s), led to bloody tragedies in the history of the Azerbaijanis and division of Azerbaijan. As a result, the northern part of Azerbaijan was joined to the Russian side, southern part was joined to the Iranian one.
| result = Bolshevik–[[Armenian Revolutionary Federation|ARF]] victory
Soon after the Turkmanchay contract, Russian emperor Nikolay I declared the creation of “The Armenian Province’’ in the territories of Yerevan and Nakhchivan khanates with a decree of the 21 March 1828.Yerevan city, where 7331 Azerbaijanifamilies and 2369 Armenian ones resided, was joined to that province.
| status =
In accord with the 15th item of the Turkmanchay contract, movements of Armenians from Iran to Yerevan, Karabakh, and Nakhchivan were lasted. The intention was to get excile of Azerbaijanis from their lands where they resided. According to the historical sources, 40000 Armenians from Iran and 84600 ones from Turkey were moved to the Caucasus Mountains in the 1829 – 1830s, and were maily settled in Nakhchican, Karabakh, Yerevan. Simultaneously, hundreds of Azerbaijanis` residential settlements were completely destroyed, thousands of people were murdered, and underwent to flee from their lands.
| combatants_header =
Armenians, invading places of Turkey, Georgia, and Azerbaijan, began to organize their communities in order to achieve chauvinistic idea of them – “Great Armenia” in the second half of the 19th century. At the same period Gnchag (1887, Geneva) and Dashnaksutun (1890, Tbilisi) parties and “Community of Armenian patriots” organization (1897, New – York) were founded.
| combatant1 = {{flagicon image|Socialist red flag.svg}} [[Bolshevik Party|Bolsheviks]]<br>{{flagicon image|Armenian Revolutionary Federation logo 1915.png}} [[Armenian Revolutionary Federation]]
In spite of any efforts, Yerevan province was at the third row after Baku and Yelizavetapol (Ganja) provinces due to the number of its population in the second half of the 19th century. According to the results of the first census in the Russian empire, 313178 Azerbaijanis resided in Yerevan province in 1897. The events at the end of the 20th century displayed that this condition led to the future tragedies of the Azerbaijanis.
| combatant2 = {{flagicon image|Flag of Azerbaijani Musavat party.svg}} [[Musavat Party]]<br>{{Flagicon|Russia}} [[Savage Division]]
The 1905 -1907s
| commander1 = [[Stepan Shahumyan]]
Armenians caused massive massacres, plundering against Azerbaijanis, their deportations in Baku, Zangazur, Yerevan, Nakhchivan, Ordubad, Echmiadzin, Javanshir, and Qazakh by benefiting from revolutionary processes in Russia and weakening of control of the Russian government to all provinces in the 1905 -1907s. Armenians thoroughly destroyed 200 villages in Ganja and Qazakh provinces, 75 ones in Shusha, Jabrayil and Zangazur provinces in the 1905 – 1906s.
| commander2 =
It is pity that there were left few materials about these events in historical sources. Nonetheless,like documents these events were portrayed in press materials of that period, books – M.S. Ordubadi `s “The Bloody Years” and M.M. Navvab `s “Armenian – Muslim Conflict in the 1905 – 1906s” wrote on the stories of suffered people and witnesses.
| strength1 = '''[[Bolsheviks]]'''<br />6,000 regular troops, Russian Fleet gunboats<ref name="Hopkirk"/><br>'''ARF'''<br>4,000 militiamen<ref name="Hopkirk"/>
The 1918 – 1920s
| strength2 = 10,000 troops and militiamen<ref name="Hopkirk"/>
After the events of the 1905 – 1907s, insidious plans of Armenians against Azerbaijanis were not stopped and lasted secretly. In according with statistical reports of the year 1916, the number of the population increased 40 times in five parts of Yerevan province in contrast with the year 1831, i.e. this figure increased from 14300 to 570000. Nevertheless, the number of Azerbaijanis increased only 4.6 times, and this figure comprised 246600 people. Population growth was 40000 people in the 1886 – 1897s. It was 17000 people in the 1905 – 1916s, whereas the number of the population was more than 61000 people in 1905 in contrast with that of 1886. These figures inform us the chauvinistic policy of Armenians in the period of the Russian Czarism, occurrences of the deportation plans against Azerbaijanis, efforts of Armenians to create “Armenia without Azerbaijanis” whom they called Turkish.
| casualties1 = 2,500 ARF soldiers<ref>{{Harv|Pasdermadjian|1918|pp=193}}</ref>
Armenians tried to arise from the Bolshevik flag, by benefiting for their advantages from circumstances in Russia after the World War I, February and October revolutions. The Baku Commune began a criminal plan of the complete extermination of Azerbaijanis in Baku Province in the year 1918 under a fight slogan against anti – revolutionaries. The crimes, caused by Armenians in those days, were imprinted in the memory of the Azerbaijanis. Thousands of Azerbaijanis were killed because of their national possessions, their homes were burnt, they alive were fired. National architectural monuments, schools, hospitals, mosques, and other buildings were devastated. Most parts of Baku were turned into a condition of ruin. Massacres of Azerbaijanis were lasted with special cruelties in Baku, Shamakhy, Quba, Karabakh, Zangazur, Nakhchivan, Lankaran and other places. The peaceful population was massively murdered in these places, villages were burnt, constructions and national monuments were destroyed. Armenians murdered 50000 Azerbaijanis in Baku, Shamakhy, Quba, Mugan, and Lankaran during March and April in 1918, their homes were plundered, ten thousands of people were banished from their homes. Only 30000 people were brutally killed in Baku. 58 villages were eradicated, and 70000 people were murdered in Shamakhy. Of 7000 people, 1653 ones were women, and 965 ones were children. 122 villages in Quba, 150 ones in Karabakh, and 115 ones in Zangazur were completely devastated; the population was plagued without depending on their ages and genders. 211 Azerbaijani villages in Yerevan province, and 92 ones in Kars were destroyed. In one of numerous applications of the Azerbaijani population of Yerevan province, there was shown that – this Azerbaijani city and 88 villages adjoining it were devastated, 1920 homes were burnt, 131970 people were killed. (“Ashkhadavor” (Farmer) newspaper, 2 November 1919).
| casualties2 = between 3,000 to 12,000 Azerbaijanis and other Muslims including civilians massacred
On 28 March 1918 the creation of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic didn`t happened without martyrs, and connected with territory loss. About this issue there was noted in a letter of the leader of Ministers Council - F.K. Khoyski to the minister of Foreign Affairs – M.G. Hajinsky: “We ended the dispute between us and Armenians, they will accept ultimatum, and stop the war. We have had to give Yerevan to them.”
| notes =
After three independent countries were created in the Caucasian territory, the area of Armenia comprised 17500 sq mile, its population did 1510000 people (795000 Armenians, 575000 Azerbaijanis, 140000 other nations). Dashnaks, not being satisfied with these events and neglecting conversations about the conflicted places in the international communities, displayed their loftiness for Akhalkalaki and Borchaly provinces of Goergia; Karabakh, Nakhchivan and Southern Yelizavetapol ones of Azerbaijan in order to make come truth their chauvinistic ideas with territories of Azerbaijan and Georgia.
| campaignbox =
Conquering these places with help of guns resulted in wars with Georgia (December 1918) and Azerbaijan. As a result, the population of the conflicted places decreased 10-30 per cent, some residential settlements were thoroughly devastated. Of 575000 Azerbaijanis resided in present Armenia, 565000 ones were murdered and deportated. These figures were affirmed in Armenian sources: “After Dashnaks the number of the Turkish (Azerbaijni) population was more than 10000 people in the Soviet Armenia.After 60000 Azerbaijanis returned in 1992, the number of them was 72596”. (Z.Korkodyan. “The Population of the Soviet Armenia”, the 1831-1931 s).
}}
While debating joint defending plans against sovietizing dangers, Armenians stated that they would never be satistfied with the territory of Yerevan province in the Tiblis conference of the Caucasian republics in1920. Consequently, they gave up the collaboration. After this statement, massacres in Karabakh, Zangazur, and Qazakh caused by Armenians in 1920; After this statement,Armenians` attacks to Shusha, Asgaran and Khankandy on March 22 while the Azerbaijanis were celebrating Novruz holiday; their activites in Zangazur; massacres done by Armenains in Karabakh, Zangazur and Qazakh can be taken into account like a mutual conspiracy of Yerevan and Moscow against Azerbaijan - an inherent part of the plan of ending the national governance and creating the Soviet governance in Azerbaijan.
The support of Armenians to Bolsheviks was valued by central governance soon. N.Narimanov, not bearing pressure of Moscow, gave a speech with a declaration on 1 December 1920. According to his speech, “Zangazur and Nakhchivan provinces those have 9800 square km are announced parts of the Soviet Armenia.
From thses facts it apparently seems that Armenians used to benefit from any techniques and support in order to get their chauvinistic endeavors. Even, they did not avoid breaking of international law norms.
The deportaions in the 1948 – 1953s
During the Soviet regime, Armenians were presenting to widen their lands with support of their neighbours and to force Azerbaijanis to leave the Armenia USSR with customary rules and methods. Armenians who resided abroad and in Armenia joined for this activity. This warns us that it was a general strategy for realizing their dream “Great Armenia”.
The Armenian dispora applied to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the USSR – V.Molotova for moving Armenians - lived in Iran to the USSR during the Tehran conference (1943). Iosif Stalin`s agreement of this suggestion founded the deportations of the Azerbaijanis from Armenia in the 1948 – 1953s.
The Armenian governance suggested joining of Karabakh in 1945 and tried to explain it with existence of economic cooperation with Armenia. This suggestion was rejected and other tact happened in this case.
Armenians moved to Armenia from abroad soon after the war of the 1941 – 1945s ended. 509000 people moved from Syria, Greece, Lebanon, Iran, Bulgaria, and Romania in 1946; 35400 ones moved from Palestine, Syria, France,USA, Greece, Egypt,Iraq, and Lebanon to Armenia in 1947.
In 1947 the secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Armenia USSR – G.Arutyunov applied Moscow for difficulties of moved Armenians` settlement problems and suggested to move Azerbaijanis, lived in Armenia, to the cities of Azerbaijan where there were cotton-growing.
This thought found its reflection in two decisions of Ministries Soviet of the USSR signed by I.Stalin: The first decision of being moved of collective farmers and other Azerbaijanis from the Armenia USSR to Kur – Araz lowland of the Azerbaijan USSR was signed on December 23, 1947. In this document, there was written a decision of being moved of 100000 Azerbaijanis to plain cities of Azerbaijan in the 1948 -1950s, without depicting reasons, mechanisms, and real condition of the movement. In accord with the decision, 10000 people in 1948, 40000 ones in 1949, 50000 ones in 1950 had to be moved to Azerbaijan. Like an addition to the first decision, the second one that comprised plans about “Being moved of collective farmers and other Azerbaijanis from the Armenia USSR to Kur – Araz lowland of the Azerbaijan USSR” was signed on 10 March 1948 and technical – organizational issues found their reflections in it.
According to the facts, 2357 families (11046 people) were moved in 1948; 2368 families (10595 people) were moved in 1949; 14361 people were moved to Azerbaijan in 1950. Of 8110 familes were moved in the 1948 – 1950s, only 4878 ones of them were provided with homes. In general, 100000 people were moved in the 1948 – 1952s. The population, were moved from mountainous provinces and were not provided with homes, could not bear hot weather condition and a lot of death facts occurred. Even applications of Azerbaijanis and the Azerbaijani government about being moved of them to Karabakh and mountainous places were refused by the Central government in that case.


The '''March Days''', or '''March Events''', refer to an inter-ethnic strife and massacres of between 3000<ref>Russia and a Divided Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition, by Tadeusz Świętochowski, Columbia University Press, 1995, p. 66</ref> to 12,000<ref name="smithmusavat">{{cite journal |last1=Smith |first1=Michael |last2= |first2= |date=April 2001 |title=Anatomy of Rumor: Murder Scandal, the Musavat Party and Narrative of the Russian Revolution in Baku, 1917-1920 |journal=Journal of Contemporary History |publisher= |volume=36 |issue=2 |page=228 |url= |doi= |quote=''The results of the March events were immediate and total for the Musavat. Several hundreds of its members were killed in the fighting; up to 12,000 Muslim civilians perished; thousands of others fled Baku in a mass exodus''}}</ref><ref name="minahan">{{cite book |title=Miniature Empires: A Historical Dictionary of the Newly Independent States |last=Minahan |first=James B. |authorlink= |coauthors= |publisher= |location= |isbn=0-313-30610-9 |page=22 |pages= |url= |accessdate= |quote=''The tensions and fighting between the Azeris and the Armenians in the federation culminated in the massacre of some 12,000 Azeris in Baku by radical Armenians and Bolshevik troops in March 1918''}}</ref> [[Azerbaijani people|Azerbaijani]]s and other Muslims<ref name="York Times Current History 1920 p. 492">{{cite journal |last1= |first1= |last2= |first2= |date=March 1920 |title=New Republics in the Caucasus |journal=The New York Times Current History |publisher= |volume=11 |issue=2 |page=492 |url= |doi= }}</ref> that took place between March 30 and April 2, 1918 in the city of [[Baku]] and adjacent areas of the [[Baku Governorate]] of the [[Russian Empire]].<ref name="Smith">{{ru icon}}{{cite web |url=http://old.sakharov-center.ru/publications/azrus/az_004.htm |title=Pamiat' ob utratakh i Azerbaidzhanskoe obshchestvo/Traumatic Loss and Azerbaijani. National Memory |author=Michael Smith |work=Azerbaidzhan i Rossiia: obshchestva i gosudarstva (Azerbaijan and Russia: Societies and States) |publisher=Sakharov Center |accessdate=21 August 2011}}</ref>
Simultaneously, 10000 Armenians were totally moved to Armenia from Syria, Lebanon, France, USA, Egypt, Bulgaria, and Romania in 1948. This fact shows that Armenians, accomplished the deportaions of Azerbaijanis, did not pay any attention to arrival of Armenians from abroad. There were 476 villages that were left useless in the plenum of CP CC of Armenian in January 1975. (“Communist” newspaper (Yerevan), 20 January 1975). In 1990 Armenian nationalists acknowledged that “empty areas, were created with the deportaions of Azerbaijanis, and a flat fund were not used for settlement of Armenians who came from abroad”. (The Sound of Armenia” newspaper, 11 November 1990).

Thanks to these events noted above, it can be summarized neither did the deportations of Azerbaijanis from Armenia play any roles in settlement of Armenians came from abroad, nor it did in development of cotton –growing in Azerbaijan as well. The main point was to realize Dasknaks` past endeavor – the creation of one – nationed state.
Facilitated by a political power struggle between [[Bolshevik]]s with support of the [[Armenian Revolutionary Federation|Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutiun)]]<ref name="dewaal2010">{{cite book |title=The Caucasus: An Introduction |last=De Waal |first=Thomas |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2010 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location= |isbn=0-19-539976-5 |pages=62 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=6X745rS5Ci8C&pg=PA62 |quote=''"In the so called March Days of 1918, Baku descended into a mini-civil war, after the Bolsheviks declared war on Musavat Party and then stood by as Dashnak militias rampaged through the city, killing Azerbaijanis indiscriminately"''}}</ref><ref name="suny41-42">{{cite book |title=The revenge of the past:nationalism, revolution, and the collapse of the Soviet Union |last=Suny |first=Ronald Grigor |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1993 |publisher=Stanford University Press |location= |isbn=0-8047-2247-1 |pages=41–42 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=-4efW7SvG0YC&pg=PA41}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=In a collapsing empire:underdevelopment, ethnic conflicts and nationalisms in the Soviet Union Volume 28 |last=Buttino |first=Marco |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1993 |publisher=Feltrinelli Editor |location= |isbn=88-07-99048-2 |pages=176 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=t5HKjm6vs3YC&pg=PA176 |quote=''"Violence increased during the Civil War, with massacres of Azeri Turks - by the combined forced of Armenian Dashnaktsutiun party and the Bolsheviks"''}}</ref> on one side and Azerbaijani [[Musavat]] Party on another, the events led to a suppression of Muslim revolt<ref name="Cavendish">{{cite book |title=World and Its Peoples: The Middle East, Western Asia, and Northern Africa |last= |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2006 |publisher=Marshall Cavendish |location= |isbn=0-7614-7571-0 |page=786 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=j894miuOqc4C&pg=PA786 |accessdate= |quote=''Muslims in Baku revolted in March 1918, but their uprising was suppressed by the city's Armenians''}}</ref> by Bolshevik and Dashnak forces<ref name="blackgarden100">{{cite book |title=Black garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through peace and war |last=De Waal |first=Thomas |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2003 |publisher=NYU Press |location= |isbn=0-8147-1945-7 |page=100 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=pletup86PMQC&pg=PA100 |accessdate= |quote=''When in March 1918, Azerbaijanis revolted against the Baku Commune, Armenian Dashnaks and Bolshevik troops poured into the Azerbaijani quarters of the city and slaughtered thousands''}}</ref><ref name="suny42">{{cite book |title=The revenge of the past:nationalism, revolution, and the collapse of the Soviet Union |last=Suny |first=Ronald Grigor |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1993 |publisher=Stanford University Press |location= |isbn=0-8047-2247-1 |pages=42 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=-4efW7SvG0YC&pg=PA42 |quote=''After crushing a Muslim revolt in the city, the Bolshevik-led government, with its small Red Guard, was forced to rely on Armenian troops led by Dashnak officers''}}</ref> and establishment of a short-lived [[Baku Commune]] in April 1918.<ref>{{cite book |title=Reformers and revolutionaries in modern Iran: new perspectives on the Iranian left |last=Cronin |first=Stephanie |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2004 |publisher=Psychology Press |location= |isbn=0-415-33128-5 |page=91 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=P2pGzBICVC4C&pg=PA91 |accessdate= |quote=''After the 'March Days', the Bolsheviks finally came to power and established their famous Baku Commune in April 1918''}}</ref>
Stalin`s death stopped a deportation process and unsettled Azerbaijanis, not bearing to live in a hard condition, returned to their motherland in spite of Armenians` discrimination and pressure against them. This led to a new Armenian chauvinistic wave – spiritual terror against Azerbaijanis. Close of institions, abolition of education in Azerbaijani, replacement of Azerbaijani government workers with Armenian ones, disregard of welfare and farming requirements of Azerbaijani villages, creation of organizations against Azerbaijanis, the splendid commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the “Armenian Genocide” were accurate achieved precautions of the Dashnak policy.

The 1990s of the 20th century
[[Azerbaijan]] officially refers to March Days as ''soyqırım'' ('genocide').<ref name="decree">[[s:Decree of President of Republic of Azerbaijan about genocide of Azerbaijani people|Decree of President of Republic of Azerbaijan about genocide of Azerbaijani people, March 1998]]</ref><ref>[http://assembly.coe.int/main.asp?Link=/documents/workingdocs/doc01/edoc9066.htm PACE Written Declaration, "Recognition of the genocide perpetrated against the Azeri population by the Armenians", Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Doc. 9066 2nd edition, 14 May 2001]</ref> Other sources interpret the March events in the context of [[civil war]] unrest.<ref name="croissant">{{cite book |title=The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict: causes and implications |last=Croissant |first=Michael |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1998 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |location= |isbn=0-275-96241-5 |page=14 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ZeP7OZZswtcC&pg=PA14 |accessdate= |quote=''The oil-rich city of Baku had emerged as a stronghold of Bolshevism shortly after the October Russian Revolution, and friction between the Bolsheviks and the pan-Turkic Musavat party sparked a brief civil war in March 1918''}}</ref>
The reorganization and accurate processes in the USSR resulted in anti – Azerbaijani moods and a new wave of territory claims. The tact that had been utilized in 1945 was started again. Armenian nationalists began to force out Azerbaijanis from Armenia and separate Karabakh from the Azerbaijani territory under the issue of existence of economic cooperation of Karabakh with Armenia.

The Gugark tragedy (resulted from massive threats since 1988, physical and spiritual pressure, murders, destruction of villages, being murdered of 70 people, 21 women and 6 children as well), being killed of 40 people in Vardenis; horrendous events in other 11 provinces – Yerevan, Masis, Kalinin, Kacaran, Gafan, Kirovakan, Gorus, Sisian, Amasiya, Alaverdy; and giving improvement to these events of the governmental organs resulted in 250000 Azerbaijanis to leave their native lands.
== Background ==
The events of the 1905 -1920s were repeated again: women and chidren, the old, came to Azerbaijan by going through snowy passes and undergoing the numerous death toll.
{{See also|Caucasus Campaign}}
The events of the 1948 – 1953s were repeated again: The settlement of the refuges in Karabakh was not given admission with an order of the central government of the Soviet Union, and they coud settle only in tent camps.

After deportation of the Azerbaijani population on 8 August 1991 from Nuvady village, given to Armenia with a statement of the Zakfederation on 18 February 1929, Armenia turned into one – nationed state and “Armenia without the Azerbaijanis” – idea was made truth.
===Political situation===
Mitilary aggression of Armenia against Azerbaijan resulted in conquest of 20 per cent of its territory, thorough devastation of invaded provinces, deportations of a million people from their native lands. More than 10000 Azerbaijanis were killed, ten thousands of ones were wounded.
Following the [[February Revolution]], a [[Special Transcaucasian Committee]], including Armenian, Azerbaijani and Georgian representatives, was established to administer parts of the [[South Caucasus]] under the control of the [[Russian Provisional Government]]. After the [[October Revolution]], on November 11, 1917, this committee was replaced by the [[Transcaucasian Commissariat]], also known as the ''Sejm'', with headquarters in [[Tiflis]]. The [[Transcaucasian_Democratic_Federative_Republic#Legislature|Sejm]] opposed Bolsheviks and sought separation of the South Caucasus from Bolshevik Russia. To prevent that, on November 13, 1917, a group of Bolsheviks and [[Left Socialist-Revolutionaries]] (SR) proclaimed the Baku Soviet, a governing body which assumed power over the territory of [[Baku Governorate]] under the leadership of Bolshevik [[Stepan Shahumyan]]. Although the Baku Soviet included Azerbaijanis and Armenians who were neither Bolsheviks nor necessarily sympathetic towards the Bolshevik ideas,<ref name=" Hopkirk">{{cite book |title=Like hidden fire. The Plot to bring down the British Empire |last=Hopkirk |first=Peter |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1994 |publisher=Kodansha Globe |location=New York |isbn=1-56836-127-0 |page= |pages=281, 283, 287 |url= |accessdate=}}</ref> the two nationalist parties and members of the [[Transcaucasian_Democratic_Federative_Republic#Legislature|Sejm]] ― the [[Musavat]]<ref>{{cite book |title=Identity Politics in Central Asia and the Muslim World |last=van Schendel |first=Willem |authorlink= |coauthors=Zürcher, Erik Jan |year=2001 |publisher=I.B.Tauris |location= |isbn=1-86064-261-6 |pages= }}</ref> and [[Armenian Revolutionary Federation]] ― refused to recognize its authority. The Baku-based [[Musavat]] dominated [[Azerbaijani National Council|Muslim National Councils]] (MNCs), a representative body which eventually formed the first Parliament of [[Azerbaijan Democratic Republic]] (ADR). [[Mammad Hasan Hajinski]] chaired the Temporary Executive Committee for the MNCs, while [[Mammed Amin Rasulzade]], [[Alimardan Topchubashev]], [[Fatali Khan Khoyski]] and other prominent political figures were among the 44 Azerbaijani delegates to the Sejm. Meanwhile, the ARF, which was established in [[Tiflis]], formed a 27-member Armenian delegation to the Sejm. The leader of the Baku Soviet, Shahumyan, kept contacts with ARF and viewed it as a source of support for eliminating Musavat influence in Baku.<ref name="swietochowski">{{cite book |title=Historical dictionary of Azerbaijan |last=Swietochowski |first=Tadeusz |authorlink= |coauthors=Collins, Brian C. |year=1999 |publisher=Scarecrow Press |location= |isbn=0-8108-3550-9 |page=117 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=yjIZ6ymyNO8C&pg=PA117 |accessdate=}}</ref> It is noteworthy that during the March Days of 1918, one of the ARF founders, [[Stepan Zorian]], was present in Baku.
The Khojaly genocide, happended on 26 Februray 1992, will stay in our memories like a brutal policy of Armenian chauvinists forever. In accord with expressions of the witness, Armenias who were called out from the spare military section took part in a violent massacre - caused by parts of the Soviet Army against peaceful population in bloody January of 1990.

All of these are the results of the chauvinistic policy of Armenian dashnaks during the 19th - 20th centuries. There has to be noted that a separatist movement is still presented, there are thoughts of division of Nakhchivan Autonomus Republic from Azerbaijan. Simultaneously, Armenians try being accepted of the “Armenian Genocide” by worldly states. Nonetheless, they have forgotten one fact: A nation that knows what is genocide can `t let it to happen to other nations conscientiously. Moreover, insincere international norms of them mean appropriacy to play either innocent roles or cruel ones.
[[File:Shahumyan.jpg|thumb|[[Stepan Shahumyan]], an ethnic [[Armenian people|Armenian]] leader of the Bolshevik Baku Soviet]]
All of these happen in front of the worldly public – get a high cultural economic level in the 21st century. Until any vandalism, separatism, nationalism, terrorism facts aren`t given worthy lawful – political value, the worldly community will be able to become in front of danger.
After the [[October Revolution]], the Russian army fell apart and its units fled the front lines en masse, often harassing local residents. Concerned with the situation, the Sejm established a Military Council of Nationalities, with Armenian, Azerbaijani and Georgian representatives, which had troops at its disposal.<ref name="kazemzadeh83">{{Harv|Kazemzadeh|1950|pp=83}}</ref> When a large group of Russian soldiers withdrew from the Ottoman front line in January 1918, the head of the council, Georgian Menshevik [[Noe Ramishvili]], ordered to disarm them. The Russian soldiers were stopped near Shamkhor station and, upon a refusal to surrender, were attacked by Azerbaijani bands in what became known as the ''Shamkhor massacre''.<ref name="kazemzadeh83" /> The Baku Soviet played out this incident into its favor against the Sejm<ref group=notes>{{quote|Here is what Bakinsky Rabochy reports about it:{{quotation|In the first half of January 1918, on the railway line between Tiflis and Yelizavetpol, armed bands of Moslems many thousand strong, headed by members of the Yelizavetpol Moslem National Committee and with the support of an armoured train sent by the Transcaucasian Commissariat, forcibly disarmed a number of military units leaving for Russia. Thousands of Russian soldiers were killed or mutilated; the railway line was strewn with their corpses. They were deprived of about 15,000 rifles, some 70 machine guns and a score of artillery pieces.}}|{{cite web |url=http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1918/03/26.htm |title=Transcaucasian Counter-revolutionaries Under a Socialist Mask |author=Joseph Stalin |date=March 26–27, 1918 |work= |publisher=Marxists Internet Archive}}}}</ref>
The lawful – political value

The first effort of giving worthy value to the events of March 1998 was done by the Azerbaijan Democratic Repubic. The Council of Ministers made a decision of creating the Emergancy Inquest Commision in order to investigate the genocide on 15 July 1918. Firstly, the Commission had to investigate the events of March, cruel massacres happened in Shamakhy and Yerevan provinces. In order to give indetailed information about these events to the worldly public, a special organization was created in the Ministery of Foreign Affairs. The Azerbaijan Democratic Republic celebrated 31 March as a day of national condolence in 1919 and 1920. It was trully an attempt to give political value to the genocide done against Azerbaijanis and conquest of its territory that lasted more than a century. Nevertheless, the end of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic did not let finish these issues.
On February 10–24, 1918, the [[Transcaucasian Commissariat|Sejm]] adopted a declaration of independence, proclaiming the [[Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic]]. In the mean time, to support Armenian resistance against the Ottoman Empire, the British government attempted to re-organize and train a group of Armenians from the Caucasus under the leadership of General [[Lionel Dunsterville]] in Baghdad.<ref name="p788">{{Harv|Northcote|1922|pp=788}}</ref> The Allies had also provided Armenians with 6,500,000 rubles ($3,250,000 of 1918 value) in financial assistance.<ref>{{Harv|Pasdermadjian|1918|p=196}}</ref> In addition, the Armenian National Organization of the Caucasus formed an Armenian Military Committee in [[Petrograd]] under General Bagradouni and called upon all Armenian military personnel scattered throughout Russia to mobilize on the Caucasus front.<ref name="Pas192">{{Harv|Pasdermadjian|1918|pp=192}}</ref> In response to this call, by early March 1918, a large number of Armenians gathered in Baku, joining a group of 200 trained officers accompanied by General Bagradouni and the ARF co-founder [[Stepan Zorian]] (Mr. Rostom).<ref name="Pas192" />
The Azerbaijan Republic, had gotten independence as a result of the end of the Soviet Union, appreciated valuing the genocide politically and finishing the affair founded by its predecessors like a chance that was given them by history.

There was given political valuation to the events of March 1918, caused by Armenian nationalsits, in a decree signed by the President of the Azerbaijan Republic – Heydar Aliyev on 26 March 1998. This date was the 80 anniversary of those events. This decree have been a program-related document about the genocide of the Azerbaijanis in the 20th century for creating accurate national memory in contemporary and future generations, giving political lawful valuation to these events, preventing them and not letting them repeat again.
The Azerbaijanis grew increasingly suspicious that Shahumyan, who was an ethnic Armenian, conspired with the Dashnaks against them. The units of [[Savage Division]], composed of Caucasian Muslims who served in the [[Imperial Russian Army]], disarmed a pro-Bolshevik garrison in [[Lankaran]], and Dagestani insurgents under Imam Najm ul-din Gotsinski drove the Bolsheviks out of [[Makhachkala|Petrovsk]], severing Baku's land communications with the Bolshevik Russia.<ref name="Swietochowski113">{{Harv|Swietochowski|2004|pp=113}}</ref> The [[Armistice of Erzincan]], followed by the [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]] signed on March 3, 1918, formalized Russia's exit from [[World War I]]. According to [[Richard G. Hovannisian]], a secret annex to the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk obligated the Bolsheviks to demobilize and dissolve ethnic Armenian bands on territories previously under Russian control.<ref>Hovannisian. "Armenia's Road to Independence", pp. 288-289.</ref> At the subsequent [[Trabzon Peace Conference]], the Ottoman delegation called for a unified position of the Sejm before the negotiations could be completed. The Bolsheviks grew increasingly concerned about the emerging Transcaucasian Federation, and in a given situation, had to choose between Musavat and ARF in the struggle to dominate Transcaucasia's largest city. Thus the Baku Soviet was drawn into the nationalistic struggle between the Azerbaijanis and the Armenians, trying to utilize one people against the other.<ref>{{Harv|Kazemzadeh|1950|pp=69}}</ref>
The National Assembly of Azerbaijan have called to join all efforts of struggling with cases like a genocide of the Azerbaijanis in any parts of the world by applying the United Nations Organization, Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, European Union, Commonwealth of Independent States and other international organizations, parliaments and governments of countries. “The day of the Azerbaijanis` genocide”, is celebrated by the Azerbaijanis annually, services these intentions and attracts attention of the wordlly public to chauvinistic separatist movements – occur nowadays. It is necessary not to forget that all of us – all nations of the world are responsible for peace of the future.

The decree of the President of the Azerbaijan Republic about the genocide of the Azerbaijanis
As Baku produced 7 million tons of oil per year (about 15% of the global oil production), during World War I the city remained in sight of the major warring powers. Even though most of the oil fields were owned by Azerbaijanis and less than 5 per cent by Armenians, most of the production/distribution rights in Baku were owned by foreign investors, primarily the British. At the beginning of 1918, Germans transferred General [[Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein]] from the [[Sinai and Palestine Campaign]] to establish the [[German Caucasus Expedition]] with the aim of capturing Baku. In response, in February 1918, the British dispatched General [[Lionel Dunsterville]] with troops to Baku through [[Enzeli]], in order to block the German move and to protect the British investments.<ref name="Soviet">"Soviet Russia" published by Russian Soviet Government Bureau, 1920, page 236</ref> Meanwhile, the Bolsheviks lost control of [[Grozny]] oilfields at the end of 1917, and Baku became the single source of oil. Lenin even asserted in one of his speeches that "Soviet Russia can't survive without Baku oil."{{Citation needed|date=August 2011}}
After the Azerbaijan Republic had gotten independence, it achieved to create an objective view of the historical past of our nation. The truths, kept secretly for a long period of time and prohibited, become apparent; events – were distorted can get real value of them.

The genocide that happened to the Azerbaijanis many times and could not be given political – lawful worth for a long period of time is one of the closed pages of the history.
=== Demographics and armed groups ===
The Gulustan and Turkmanchay contracts, were signed in 1813 and 1828, founded the division of the Azerbaijanis and separation of our historical lands. The conquest of its lands was started as progress of this national tragedy of the Azerbaijanis. Movements of Armenians to the lands of Azerbaijan were done by being realized of this policy within a short period of time. The genocide turned into an intrinsic part of the invasion of the Azerbaijani lands.
[[File:Azerbaijani victims in Baku with consul from Iran.jpg|300px|thumb|Postcard from [[Iran]]. [[Iran]]ian consul M.S. Vezare-Maragai near [[muslim]] ([[Azerbaijani people|Azerbaijani]]) victims in [[Baku]] after March days]]
Although Armenians – settled in the territories of Yerevan, Nakhchivan and Karabakh khanates had ethnic minority in contrast with Azerbaijanis - resided there, they could accomplish creating an administrative division called “Armenian province” under their adherents` patronage. The base of a policy about the deportations of Azerbaijanis from their lands and their extermination was founded with such artificial area division.The propaganda of the “Great Armenia” idea was started. In order to give justice to the creation of this fiction state in the lands of Azerbaijan, massive programs about falsifying the history of the Armenians were realized. Falsifying the history of Azerbaijan and all the Caucasian territory comprised an essential part of those programs.
Before World War I, the population of [[Baku]], including the Bailoff promontory, the White Town, the oil fields and the neighboring villages, amounted to over 200,000 and distributed as follows: 74,000 temporary migrants from various parts of [[Russia]], 56,000 [[Azerbaijani people|Azerbaijani]] natives of the town and district, 25,000 [[Armenian people|Armenian]]s, 18,000 [[Persian people|Persian]]s, 6,000 Jews, 4,000 [[Volga Tatars]], 3,800 [[Lezgins]], 2,600 [[Georgians]], 5,000 [[Germans]], 1,500 [[Poles]] and many other nationalities numbering less than 1,000 each. [[Azerbaijani people|Azerbaijanis]] formed the majority among natives and owned the greater part of land including the oil fields. They also constituted most of the labor force and small trading class as well as some commercial and financial posts. The petroleum industry was largely owned by a small number of foreign capitalists.<ref>Luigi Villari "Fire and sword in the Caucasus," page 186</ref>
Armenian invaders, getting inspiration from their dream of creating “Great Armenia”, did massive bloody actions against Azerbaijanis openly in the 1905 -1907s. Armenians` savagery, had arosed from Baku, covered all Azerbaijan and Azerbaijani villages in the area of present Armenia. Hundreds of residential settlements weredevastated, thousands of Azerbaijanis were killed cruelly. The organizers of these events created minus impression of Azerbaijanis and hid their adventurous loftiness, by trying prevention of disclosing and being given worthy lawful – political valuation of these events.

Armenians achieved to realize their loftiness under the Bolshevik flag by benefiting the First World War, the Russian revolutions of February and October of the year 1917 skilfully. An offensive plan had been begun to happen under fight propaganda with anti – revolutionary parts in order to clean all Baku province from Azerbaijanis since March of the year 1918 by Baku Commune. The crimes that were done in those days by Armenians were imprinted on the mind of the Azerbaijanis forever. Thousands of peaceful Azerbaijanis were murdered thanks to only their national possession. Armenians burned homes, lit people alive. Fine national architectural monuments, schools, hospitals, mosques, and other monuments were destroyed, and most part of Baku was turned into a state of ruin.
Prior to 1918 March events, the major armed groups in Baku consisted of 6,000 men from the remnants of [[Russian Caucasus Army (World War I)|Russian Caucasus Army]] that withdrew from the Ottoman front line, about 4,000 men of the [[Armenian militia]] organized under the ARF Dashnaktsutiun,<ref name="Stephan63">Stepan Shahumyan. Letters 1896-1918. State Publishing House of Armenia, Yerevan, 1959; pages 63-67.</ref> and an undefined number of soldiers of the [[Savage Division]] disbanded in January 1918.<ref>{{Harv|Altstadt|1992|pp=85}}</ref>
The genocide of the Azerbaijanis was done in Baku, Shamakhy, Quba, Karabakh, Zangazur, Nakhchivan, Lankaran provinces and other parts of Azerbaijan with special cruelties. The peaceful population was killed massively, villages were burned, national cultural monuments were devastated completely in these places.

After the Azerbaijan Nation Republic was founded in March 1918, it paid more attention to the events of the year 1918. The Ministers Committee made a decision about creating the Emergency Inquest Commission in order to investigate this tragedy on July 15, 1918. The Commission was investigating the genocide of March, cruelties in Shamakhy, serious crimes done by Armenians in Yerevan province. There was created a special organization under the governance of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to inform the worldly public about these truths. The Azerbaijan Nation Republic celebrated March 31 like a nationwide mourning day twice – in 1919 and 1920. This was truly the first effort of political valuation in the process of the genocides done against Azerbaijanis and invasion of our lands lasted more than a century. Nevertheless, the fall of the Azerbaijan Nation Republic did not allow this affair to finish.
== Events of March 30 - April 2, 1918 ==
Armenians, using sovietizing of the Caucasian territory for their dirty intentions, declared Zangazur and a lot of other lands of Azerbaijan like the territory of the Armenia USSR in 1920. In the intention of widening the policy of the deportations of Azerbaijanis from these lands, they applied other methods. Subsequently, at the state level they achieved a special decision of the Ministers Soviet of the USSR of 23 December 1947 – “About movements of the collective farmers and other Azerbaijanis from the Armenia USSR to Kur –Araz lowland of the Azerbaijan USSR” and massive deportations of Azerbaijanis from their historical lands in the 1948 – 1953s.
[[File:4 march days 1918.jpg|thumb|Bazarnaya Street (modern day Azerbaijan Avenue) during the March days in 1918.]]
Armenian nationalists began a serious spiritual aggressive company against the Azerbaijanis with support of their adherents in the 1950s. They tried to prove belonging to the Armenians of fine samples of national culture, classical heritage, architectural monuments of ours in books magazines, and newspapers in past Soviet territory regularly. Simultaneously, efforts of formation of minus impression of the Azerbaijanis were intensified by them all over the world. By creating the image of “The Miserable Innocent Armenians”, all events that happened in the region at the beginning of the century were misrepresented logically, and people who caused genocides against Azerbaijanis were said be martyrs of those genocides.
When the staff of the disbanded [[Savage Division]] arrived in Baku on March 9, 1918, the Soviet immediately arrested its commander, General Talyshinski. The move sparked protests from Azerbaijani population, with occasional calls to offer armed resistance to the Soviet. According to [[Firuz Kazemzadeh]], Shahumyan could have prevented bloodshed, had he been less impulsive and stubborn. Only a few days earlier, Shahumyan received a telegram from [[Lenin]], in which he was advised "to learn diplomacy", but this advice was ignored.<ref group=notes>{{quote|Dear Comrade Shahumyan:<br>Many thanks for the letter. We are delighted by your firm and decisive policy; do unite with it a most cautious diplomacy, which is doubtlessly made necessary by the present most difficult situation, and we shall win.<br>The difficulties are unfathomable; up to now we have been saved by the contradictions and conflicts and the struggle among imperialists. Be able to use these conflicts; now it is necessary to learn diplomacy.<br>Best wishes and greetings to all the friends.|V. Ulyanov (Lenin)|Stepan Shahumyan, Статьи и речи, Bakinskii Rabochii, Articles and speeches of the Bolshevik Extraordinary Commissar for the Caucasus, 1924, p. 224}}</ref>
There happened massive deportations of Azerbaijanis, experiencing persecutions, from other parts of the Armenia USSR and Yerevan – majority of its population was Azerbaijani; being broken rights of Azerbaijanis by Armenians roughly; prevention of studying in the mother tongue; repressions against Azerbaijanis; changing historical names of Azerbaijani villages; replacing old toponyms with modern names in toponym history at the beginning of the century.

In order to cause falsified Armenian history to live in the spirits of the young Armenian chauvinists, it was raised at the state political level. Our new generation, had been brought up with literature and cultural spirit of Azerbaijan – serviced great humanist ideas, underwent persecutions of the extremist Armenians ideology.
The March 1918 confrontation was triggered by an incident with the steamship "Evelina". On March 27, 1918, fifty former [[Savage Division]] servicemen arrived in Baku on board of this steamship, to attend the funeral of their colleague Mamed Tagiyev, son of a famous Azerbaijani oil magnate and philanthropist [[Haji Zeynalabdin Taghiyev]]. M. Tagiyev was killed in a skirmish with the Russian-Armenian forces in [[Lenkoran]].<ref name="Smith"/><ref>"The Russian Revolution as National Revolution: Tragic Deaths and Rituals of Remembrance in Muslim Azerbaijan (1907–1920)," Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas, vol. 49 (2001).</ref> Some sources state that when soldiers got back on the "Evelina" to sail out of Baku on March 30, 1918, the Soviet received information that the Muslim crew of the ship was armed and waiting for a signal to revolt against the Soviet. While the report lacked foundation, the Soviet acted on it, disarming the crew which tried to resist.<ref name="dokumenty">{{cite book |title={{lang|ru|Документы по истории гражданской войны в СССР. Т.: Первый этап гражданской войны}} |last=Минц |first=И. |authorlink= |coauthors=Городецкого, Е. |year=1940 |publisher= |location= |isbn= |pages=282–283|volume=1 }}</ref><ref>{{Harv|Swietochowski|2004|pp=115}}</ref><ref name="altstadt86">{{Harv|Altstadt|1992|pp=86}}</ref> Other sources claim that <ref group=notes>{{quote|Peter Hopkirk:<br> alarmed by the growing military strength of the Armenians, to which British founding had undoubtedly contributed, the Baku Muslims had secretly sought help from their co-religionists elsewhere. Among those who responded were units of the all-Muslim Savage Division, which had until the Revolution formed part of the Tsarist forces. Flushed by their success in overthrowing the Bolshevik garrison at the Caspian port of Lenkoran, some detachments now set sail for Baku. Their arrival, on March 30, caused great consternation among both Bolsheviks and Armenians. When officials were sent down to the dockside to try to discover what their intentions were, they were driven back by gunfire, a number of them being killed. Eventually however, the newcomers were disarmed by a stronger Bolshevik force. But then more units of the Savage Division arrived on April 1, in MacDonell's words, "the Baku cauldron boiled over". No one really knows who fired the first shot, but very soon it had become a battlefield, with trenches and barricades being hastily prepared everywhere.|Peter Hopkirk|Claims of the Peace Delegation of the Republic of Caucasian Azerbaijan presented to the Peace Conference in Paris, Paris, 1919, pp. 18–19.}}</ref> Azerbaijanis were alarmed by the growing military strength of the Armenians in Baku, and called for help of the Savage division units in Lenkoran. Their arrival caused great concerns among both Bolsheviks and Armenians, and when officials were sent down to the dockside to try to discover what their intentions were, they were driven back by gunfire, a number of them being killed. Eventually, however, these Savage Division soldiers were disarmed by a stronger Bolshevik force.<ref name=" Hopkirk"/>
Aspersions against morality, national honor, and dignity of the Azerbaijanis were creating an ideological reason for political and military aggression. Since the genocidal policy against our nation did not get its worthy political – lawful value, historical facts were misrepresented in the soviet press, and public thought was manipulated. The government of the Azerbaijan Republic did not give an appropriate answer to anti – Azerbaijani propaganda that was intensifying in the middle of the 1980s were founded and done by Armenians benefiting from the Soviet Regime.

There was not given right value to the deportations of hundred thousands of Azerbaijanis from their historical lands in the first stage of the spurious Mountainous Karabakh conflict – had been founded since 1988. Our nation accepted the unconstitutional decision of the Armenians about joining the Mountainous Karabakh Autonomous Province of Azerbaijan to the Armenian USSR and with support of the Special Governance Committee Moscow`s separation of this province from the subjection of Azerbaijan with serious denials; they underwent to make essential political actions. Although there was criticized the invasion policy of our lands determinedly during the meetings in the republic, the Azerbaijani government did not give up its passive stance. In order to strangle the intensifying nation movement, the troops were brought into Baku in January of the year 1990, hundreds of Azerbaijanis were killed, were disabled, wounded and experienced other physical tortures.
[[File:2 march days 1918.jpg|thumb|[[Ismailiyya building]]]]
The population of Khojaly city underwent unobserved torture in February of the year 1992. This horrendous tragedy,was imprinted in our history like the Khojaly genocide, ended with being killed of thousands of Azerbaijanis, capture of them, devastation of the city.
By 6 p.m. on March 30, 1918, Baku was filled with fighting. Trenches were being dug, barricades erected, and preparations made for warfare.<ref name="thchalkhouchian85">G. Tchalkhouchian. ''Le livre rouge'', Paris, Veradzenout, 1919, pp. 85-86</ref> The Soviet side, led by Shahumyan, realized that full civil war was starting and its own forces were insufficient against Azerbaijani masses led by [[Musavat]]. Allies were found among the [[Mensheviks]], [[Socialist-Revolutionary Party|SRs]], and the [[Constitutional Democratic Party|Kadets]] (right-wing liberals), which promised support the Bolsheviks as the champions of the "Russian Cause."<ref>B. Baikov. ''Воспоминания о революции в Закавказии'', Memoirs of Russian Kadet in Baku 1917 - 1920, p. 122.</ref> In response to these, Musavat's ''Achiq Söz'' newspaper noted that while Bolsheviks and Mensheviks were fighting all year, both were uniting against Musavat even with the Kadets and the Dashnaks. The paper attributed such alliance to national factors, and concluded that the Soviet's attempt to provoke "one nationality against another, instead of fighting a class war, was a tragic capitulation of democracy".<ref>''Achiq Söz'', No. 627, 1918, cited in {{Harv|Ratgauzer|1927|pp=143}}</ref>
As a result of the adventurous actions begun by nationalistic – separatism Armenians in the Mountainous Karabakh, more than one million Azerbaijanis were deported from their native lands by Armenian invaders, and have undergone to live in tents. During the invasion of 20 per cent of our territory, thousands of our citizens became a martyr and were injured.

All tragedies of Azerbaijan – happened in the 19th -20th centuries were observed with invasion of its lands and comprised each stage of the genocidal policy was thought by Armenians against Azerbaijanis. There was represented an effort of giving political value to only one of these events – March genocide of the year1998. Like a successor of the Azerbaijan Nation Republic - could not finish affairs till end logically, the Azerbaijan Republic takes into account a debt of giving political value to the genocidal events as a historical command.
In the morning of March 31, Azerbaijanis opposed to the Bolshevik disarming of Savage Division held protests in Baku, demanding to arm the Muslims. The Azerbaijani Bolshevik organization Hümmet attempted to mediate the dispute by proposing that the arms taken from the Savage Division are transferred to the custody of the Hümmet. Shahumyan agreed to this proposal. But on the afternoon of March 31, when Muslim representatives appeared before the Baku Soviet leadership to take the arms, shots were already heard in the city and the Soviet commissar [[Prokofy Dzhaparidze]] refused to provide arms and informed the Hümmet leadership that "Musavat had launched a political war".<ref name="altstadt86" /><ref name="rgsunycommune">{{Harv|Suny|1972|pp=217–221}}</ref> The talks broke off abruptly after the Soviet's soldiers were fired upon. Bolsheviks accused the Muslims in the incident, stopped negotiations, and opened hostilities. Later Shahumyan admitted that the Bolsheviks deliberately used a pretext to attack their political opponents:
In the intention of noting all genocidal tragedies were done against the Azerbaijanis, I decide:

1. March 31 is declared the day of the Azerbaijanis` Genocide.
{{quotation|We needed to give a rebuff, and we exploited the opportunity of the first attempt at an armed assault on our cavalry unit and began an attack on the whole front. Due to the efforts of both the local Soviet and the Military-revolutionary committee of the Caucasus Army, which moved here (from Tiflis and Sarikamish) we already had armed forces - about 6,000 strong. [[Dashnaktsutiun]] also had 3,000 - 4,000 strong national forces, which were at our disposal. The participation of the latter lent the civil war, to some extent, the character of an ethnic massacre, however, it was impossible to avoid it. We were going for it deliberately. The Muslim poor suffered severely, however they are now rallying around the Bolsheviks and the Soviet.<ref name="Stephan63"/>}}
2. The National Assembly of the Azerbaijan Republic is recommended to investigate a special session that is dedicated the Azerbaijanis` Genocide.

Heydar Aliyev,
Armenians initially remained neutral as the Muslim rebellion against the Soviet began. The Musavat Party proposed an alliance with the Dashnaks, but was given a rebuff. The Armenian leadership withdrew its forces to the Armenian areas of Baku and limited its action to self-defense. On the evening of March 31, machine-gun and rifle fire in Baku intensified into a full-fledged battle.<ref name="rgsunycommune"/> On the morning of April 1, 1918, the Committee of Revolutionary Defense of Baku's Soviet issued a leaflet which said:
The President of the Azerbaijan Republic.

Baku, March 26, 1998.
{{quotation|In view of the fact that the counterrevolutionary Musavat party declared war on the Soviet of Workers', Soldiers', and Sailors' Deputies in the city of Baku and thus threatened the existence of the government of the revolutionary democracy, Baku is declared to be in a state of siege<ref name="rgsunycommune"/>}}
N 690

The statement of the National Assembly of the Azerbaijan Republic about the day of the Azerbaijanis` genocide
Forced to seek support from either Muslim Musavat or Armenian Dashnaktsutyun, Shahumyan, himself an Armenian, chose the latter. Following initial skirmishes in the streets, the Dashnaks proceeded to initiate a massacre, wildly killing Musavat military elements and Muslim civilians alike without mercy or discrimination in both Baku and the surrounding countryside.<ref name=Marshall>{{cite book|last=Alex|first=Marshall|title=The Caucasus Under Soviet Rule|year=2009|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=<!--0415410126, -->9780415410120|pages=89|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=F0mlUS7rlhcC&pg=PA96&dq|edition=Volume 12 of Routledge Studies in the History of Russia and Eastern Europe}}</ref>
“About the genocide of the Azerbaijanis”, is the statement of his majesty, Mr. Heydar Aliyev, is noted like the first official document – lightens this black page of our history by The National assembly of the Azerbaijan Republic; and it takes into account the announcement of “The Day of the Azerbaijanis` Genocide” on March 31 (it is the anniversary of crimes were done against Azerbaijanis 80 years ago) like an essential political – lawful spiritual action that gives a way to developing national memory, finding historical truths and getting their worthy level in world – wide society.

The names of the massive massacres – genocides (were done against Azerbaijanis with cruelties that never seemed in the history of the human beings after the forced division of Azerbaijan in the 19th century) are firstly noted in this document; thereare rendered the roots of the ethnic hostile policy that were particularly done against the Azerbaijanis in the scale of all the Caucasian territory in the 1905 -1907s, 1918 -1920s, 1948 -1953s, and 1988 -1993s by Armenian nationalists, chauvinistic organizations, and belligerent forces of big countries of their supporters; there are politically valued offensive activities of anti – Azerbaijani forces in whose point of view it was main real way of making realize “Great Armenian” dream to kill Azerbaijanis - local population of these places, to deport them, to destroy their historical and cultural monuments, to change names of geographical places.
No quarter was given by either side: neither age nor sex was respected. Enormous crowds roamed the streets, burning houses, killing every passer-by who was identified as an enemy, many innocent persons suffering death at the hands of both the Armenians and Azerbaijanis. The struggle which had begun as a political contest between the Musavat and the Soviet turned into a gigantic ethnic-religious riot.<ref name="kazemzadeh73">{{Harv|Kazemzadeh|1950|pp=73}}</ref> There were descriptions of Dashnak forces taking to looting, burning and killing in the Muslim sections of the city.<ref name="Swietochowski116">{{Harv|Swietochowski|2004|pp=116}}</ref> According to [[Peter Hopkirk]], "Armenians, seeing that at last they had their ancient foes on the run, were now out for vengeance".<ref name=" Hopkirk"/> In Balakhany and Ramany districts of Baku, the majority of Muslim workers stayed at their places and avoided the battles, while the peasants were not moved to join the anti-Soviet rebels. The Persian workers remained passive during all of the fighting, refusing to take sides.<ref name="rgsunycommune" /> Left-wing Muslim leaders, including those of SRs and Hümmet Party, such as Narimanov, Azizbekov, Bunyat Sardarov and Kazi-Magomed Aghasiyev, supported the Soviet forces<ref>Г. Гасанов, Н. Саркисов. Статьи. Советская власть в Баку в 1918 году (Бакинская Коммуна). Историк-марксист, No. 5(069), 1938, 41</ref> During the battles, Bolsheviks decided to use artillery against the Azerbaijani residential quarters in the city.<ref name="altstadt86" />
After the Gulustan and Turkmanchay peace contracts – formalized the occupation of Azerbaijan by Russia, movements of ten thousands of Armenians to Azerbaijan, giving them more law and eligibility in contrast with the local population because of religious unity resulted in deportations of the Azerbaijanis with any efforts by Russian – Armenians alliance. This process became more rapid after Armenians nationalistic parties, for instance “Dashnak” and “Gnchak”, began activities and joined fanatic Armenian masses around chauvinistic ideas. Armed organized Armenian teams were the first author of the most horrendous crime as genocide in the Caucasian territory in 1905 when the first Russian revolution began. They massively plagued Azerbaijanis; fired the cities and villages; killed cruelly children, women, the old in Baku, Tbilisi, Yerevan, Nakhchivan, Ganja, Karabakh, and Zangazur in the 1905 – 1907s. 75 Azerbaijani villages were thoroughly destroyed in Shusha, Javanshir, Jabrayil, and Zangazur; more than 200 residential settlements were devastated in Yeravan and Ganja provinces at that time. Ten thousands of Azerbaijanis, had been able to stay alive from Armenian cruelty, underwent to flee from their native lands. So, the offensive fleeing custom (which history is about a hundred) was founded.

On the afternoon on April 1, a Muslim delegation arrived at the Hotel Astoria. The Committee of Revolutionary Defense presented them with an ultimatum<ref group=notes>{{quote|The contents of the ultimatum presented by the Bolsheviks and accepted by the Musavat:{{cquote|We demand the immediate end of the military activity opened against Soviet power in the city of Baku; we demand the immediate surrender of fortified posts and the destruction of trenches. In order to avoid repetition in the future of such acts, the Committee of Revolutionary Defense demands:<br /><br />
1. Open and unconditional recognition of the power of the Baku Soviet of Workers, Soldiers, and Sailors Deputies and the complete subordination to all its orders.<br />
2. The "Savage Division" as a counterrevolutionary military units cannot be tolerated with the bounds of Baku and its districts. Other national Moslem military units, as well as Armenian ones, should be either led out of the city or subordinated completely to the Soviet. Whole armed population must be under the control and check of the Soviet.<br />
3. We demand the acceptance of immediate measures to open the railroads from Baku to Tiflis and from Baku to Petrovsk.}}|{{Harv|Suny|1972|pp=217–221}}}}</ref> and demanded that representatives of all Muslim parties sign the document before the shelling stopped. Early in the evening, the agreements were signed and the bombardment stopped.<ref name="rgsunycommune" /> The fighting did not subside, however, till the night of April 2, 1918, when thousands of Muslims started leaving the city in a mass exodus. By the fifth day, although much of the city was still ablaze, all resistance had ceased, leaving the streets strewn with dead and wounded, nearly all of them Muslims.<ref name=" Hopkirk"/> So the armed conflict between the Musavat and the joint Soviet-ARF forces ended on March 3, 1918 with the victory of the latter.

<gallery caption="City of Baku" widths="180px" perrow="5">
Image:1 march days 1918.jpg|Ruins of the editorial office of the ''Kaspi'' newspaper on Nikolayevskaya Street (present-day Istiglaliyyat Street)
Image:3 march days 1918.jpg|Gubernskaya Street (present-day Nizami Street)
Image:5 march days 1918.jpg|Bazarnaya Street (present-day Azerbaijan Avenue)
Image:6 march days 1918.jpg|Pochtovaya Street (present-day Taghizadeh Street)
</gallery>

== Casualties ==
[[File:Removing the dead from the streets of baku march days 1918.png|thumb|Removing the dead from the streets]]
The May 1918 dispatch of the New York Times stated that "2000 were killed and 3000 were wounded in struggle between Russians and Mussulmans".<ref>{{cite news |title= BAKU IN FLAMES AS BATTLE RAGES; 2,000 Killed and 3,000 Wounded in Struggle Between Russians and Mussulmans|first= |last= |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F50D11FC3D5A11738DDDA90A94DD405B888DF1D3 |newspaper=New York Times |date=May 20, 1918 |page=2 |accessdate=August 18, 2011}}</ref> Later 1919 publication by the New York Times concluded that 12,000 people were killed during the March Days of 1918.<ref name="nytimes1919">{{cite news |title=Land of Eternal Fires: So the little Republic of Azerbaidjan is called - Its territorial dispute with Armenia |first= |last= |url=http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9C05EFDA1038EE32A2575AC1A9669D946896D6CF |newspaper=New York Times |date=October 19, 1919 |page= |accessdate=August 22, 2011}}</ref> The same publication wrote that according to Azerbaijani representatives, Bolsheviks crushed Muslims with assistance from Armenians who wanted to "wipe out old enemies and seize their lands".<ref name="nytimes1919" /> The post-1920 New York Times editions used the same figure of 12,000 victims,<ref name="York Times Current History 1920 p. 492"/> as did several historians.<ref name="smithmusavat" /><ref name="minahan" />

Azerbaijani delegation to the [[Paris Peace Conference, 1919|1919 Paris Peace Conference]] provided the following interpretation of the March Days:
{{quotation|In that bloodthirsty episode, which had such fatal effects upon the Muslims, the principal part was played by the Armenians, who were then in Baku, clustering as elsewhere around their nationalist party [ARF]... The truth is that the Armenians under the guise of Bolshevism, rushed on the Muslims and massacred during a few frightful days more than 12,000 people, many of whom were old men, women, and children.<ref name="claims18">''Claims of the Peace Delegation of the Republic of Caucasian Azerbaijan presented to the Peace Conference in Paris'', Paris, 1919, pp. 18–19.</ref>}}

The leader of Baku Soviet, Stepan Shahumyan, claimed that more than 3,000 killed in two days.<ref name="altstadt86"/><ref>{{Harv|Ratgauzer|1927|pp=144}}</ref><ref>Richard Pipes. The formation of the Soviet Union: communism and nationalism, 1917-1923. p.200</ref><ref group=notes>{{quote|On one side were fighting the Soviet Red Guard; the Red International Army, recently organized by us; the Red Fleet, which we had succeeded in reorganizing in a short time; and Armenian national units. On the other side the Muslim Savage Division in which there were quite a few Russian officers, and bands of armed Muslims, led by the Musavat Party... For us the results of the battle were brilliant. The destruction of the enemy was complete... More than three thousand were killed on both sides|Stepan Shahumyan. Letters 1896-1918. State Publishing House of Armenia, Yerevan, 1959; pages 63-67}}</ref> However, in his October 1918 article for the Armenian Herald, publication of the Boston-based Armenian National Union of America, one of the prominent ARF leaders, [[Karekin Pastermadjian]], asserted that over 10,000 Azerbaijanis and nearly 2,500 Armenians were killed during the March Days of 1918.<ref group=notes>{{quote|The leaders of the Tartars at Baku were convinced that they would easily disarm the Armenian soldiers, because they were somewhat shut up in Baku, but they were sadly mistaken in their calculations. After a bloody battle which lasted a whole week the Armenians remained masters of the city and its oil wells. They suffered a loss of nearly 2,500 killed, while Tartars lost more than 10,000. The commander of the military forces of the Armenians was the same General Bagradouni, who, although he lost both of his legs during the fight, continued his duties until September 14, when the Armenians and the small number of Englishmen who came to their assistance, were forced to abandon Baku to the superior forces of the Turco-Tartars, and retreat toward the city of Enzeli in the northern Caucasus|{{Harv|Pasdermadjian|1918|pp=193}}}}</ref>

== Aftermath ==
{{Further|Armenian–Azerbaijani War|Battle of Baku}}
[[File:the aftermath in the tatar quarter of baku march days 1918.png|thumb|The aftermath in the Azerbaijani quarter]]
In the immediate aftermath of the March Days, many of the Muslim survivors fled to [[Ganja, Azerbaijan|Elisabethpol (Ganja)]] in central Azerbaijan. While the [[Azerbaijani National Council|Temporary Executive Committee of the Muslim National Councils]] and the [[Musavat]] ceased their activities on the territory of the [[Baku Governorate]], the left-wing Azerbaijani political groups, such as the SRs and the Hümmet, benefited from the developments and became effective leaders of the Azerbaijani community in Baku. The Muslim Socialist Bureau appealed to the Committee of Revolutionary Defense to redress some of the grievances of some of the Muslims.<ref name="rgsunycommune" />

On April 13, 1918, within few days of the massacres, the Bolsheviks under the leadership of [[Stepan Shahumyan]] proclaimed the [[Baku Commune]]. This new body endeavored to nationalize Baku's oil fields, drawing ire from the British,<ref name="Soviet"/> and to form the "Red Army of Baku", an undisciplined and poorly managed force composed largely of ethnic Armenian recruits.<ref name=autogenerated2>[http://www.marxists.org/archive/serge/1930/year-one/ch06.htm Year One of the Russian Revolution | Chpt. 6<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref> Although the majority of the Commissars (leaders of Baku Commune) were ethnic Armenians, two of them were ethnic Azeri revolutionaries, [[Meshadi Azizbekov]] and [[Mir Hasan Vazirov]]. Nevertheless, in Azeri psyche, the Baku Commune symbolized the Bolshevik - Armenian collusion born out of the March Days bloodbath.<ref>Tadeusz Swietochowski. Russia and Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition. ISBN 0-231-07068-3</ref>

March Days of 1918 had a profound effect on the formulation of Azerbaijani political objectives as well. While before Azerbaijani leaders only sought an autonomy within the Russian domain, after the Bolshevik-perpetrated massacres in Baku, they no longer believed in Russian Revolution and turned to the Ottomans for support in achieving total independence.<ref>{{Harv|Swietochowski|2004|pp=119}}</ref> Therefore when [[Azerbaijan Democratic Republic]] was proclaimed on May 28, 1918, its government immediately dispatched a delegation to Istanbul for discussing a possibility of the Ottoman military support for the young republic. The Ottoman triumvir, [[Enver Pasha]], agreed to Azerbaijani requests and charged his brother, [[Nuru Pasha]], with forming an Ottoman military unit, known as the [[Ottoman Army of Islam|Caucasus Army of Islam]], to retake Baku. When in July 1918, the Ottoman-Azerbaijani force defeated the "Red Army of Baku" in several key battles in Central Azerbaijan, Bolshevik power in Baku started crumbling under pressure from the [[Socialist-Revolutionary Party|Russian Socialist Revolutionaries]], Dashnaks and British agents in the city. On August 1, 1918, the Baku Commune was replaced by the [[Centrocaspian Dictatorship]], which desperately invited a [[Dunsterforce|1000-strong British expeditionary force]] led by General [[Lionel Dunsterville]] to the city. But this was a futile effort and, in face of an overwhelming Ottoman-Azerbaijani offensive, the [[Dunsterforce]] fled and the Caucasus Army of Islam entered the Azerbaijani capital on September 15, 1918.

The March Days brought the underlying tension between the Armenians and Azerbaijanis to the fore. Less than six months after the March massacres, when the [[Ottoman Army of Islam|Ottoman-Azerbaijani force]] entered Baku, the city fell into chaos and [[September Days|nearly 10,000 Armenians were massacred]].<ref name="marshall">{{cite book |title=The Caucasus under Soviet rule |last=Marshall |first=Alex |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2009 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |location= |isbn=0-415-41012-6 |page=96 |pages= |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=F0mlUS7rlhcC&pg=PA96 |accessdate=}}</ref> A special commission formed by the [[Armenian Congress of Eastern Armenians|Armenian National Council]] (ANC) reported a total of 8,988 ethnic Armenians massacred, among which were 5,248 Armenian inhabitants of Baku, 1,500 Armenian refugees from other parts of the Caucasus who were in Baku, and 2,240 Armenians whose corpses were found in the streets but whose identities were never established.<ref name="kazemzadeh143">{{Harv|Kazemzadeh|1950|pp=143–144}}</ref> Although these figures were gathered by the Armenian National Council, and have been questioned by some,<ref name="kazemzadeh143" /> given the general run of events, they were unlikely to be too exaggerated.<ref>B. Ishkhanian. ''Великие ужасы в городе Баку'', Tiflis, 1920, pp. 28-30 quoted {{Harv|Kazemzadeh|1950|pp=143–144}}</ref>

While trying to escape Baku amidst the Ottoman-Azerbaijani offensive, the Bolshevik Baku Commissars were taken by a ship across the Caspian to Krasnovodsk, where they were imprisoned by the Social Revolutionary [[Transcaspian Government]] with alleged support of the British. Few days later, on September 20, 1918, between the stations of Pereval and Akhcha-Kuyma on the [[Trans-Caspian railway]], 26 of the Commissars were executed by a firing squad.<ref name="marshall" />

== Analysis and interpretations ==
According to Michael Smith, Muslims faced a crushing defeat at the hands of Baku Soviet followed by an "unrestrained brutality of Dashnak forces".<ref name="Smith"/> While in the aftermath of the tragic events, Musavat used them to foster a national memory of pain, its leader [[Mammad Emin Rasulzade|M. E. Rasulzade]] provided an analysis which seems to reflect the essence of witness accounts. In Rasulzade's view, Bolsheviks and their supporters sought to diminish Musavat's influence among Azerbaijani masses for a long time, and Muslim elites felt frustrated and powerless in face of this pressure. March Days were a violent culmination in this assault of Russian Bolshevism against the unprepared Azerbaijani people.<ref name="Smith"/>

=== Azerbaijani position ===
[[File:Armenia in Paris Peace Conferance 1919.jpg|thumb|Azeri sources say that the "[[Greater Armenia (political concept)|Greater Armenia]]" was used in order to "justify" the attempts to create this artificial state on Azerbaijani land<ref name="decree"/>]]

The leader of [[Musavat]] [[Mammed Amin Rasulzade]] stated with regard to the March Days:
{{quotation|Musavat was blamed for the March events. It is absolutely baseless, because to declare a war one must possess at least some physical strength, which Musavat lacked. Others accuse Musavat that it provoked the March events by defending the idea of autonomy for Azerbaijan. This could resemble the truth to a certain extent. If we obediently bowed to the enemies of our freedom, these events might not have happened. But we could not have done that. We openly claimed the autonomy for Azerbaijan, and this increased the number of our enemies.<ref>"Azerbaijan" newspaper, 6 December 1919</ref>}}

In [[Soviet Azerbaijan]], historical accounts of March Days were made to support the actions of Baku Soviet and to condemn Musavat as the culprit of the tragedy. Soviet historiography also tried to suppress the memory of 1918 massacres and omitted the fact that Bolsheviks used the Armenian-Azerbaijani ethnic confrontation to gain power. However, in 1978, then-leader of Soviet Azerbaijan, [[Heydar Aliyev]] recalled the forgotten March Days in his speech dedicated to the 100th anniversary of [[Stepan Shahumyan]] as follows:
{{quotation|In March 1918, the Musavatist anti-Soviet rebellion was raised in Baku, intending to strangle the Soviet Government. Thanks to the firm and resolute action of the Bolsheviks, however, the rebellion was extinguished." <ref>Алиев Г.А. Мужественный борец за дело Ленина, за коммунизм. К 100-летию со дня рождения С.Г. Шаумяна. Доклад на торжественном собрании, посвященном 100-летию со дня рождения С.Г. Шаумяна. Баку. 11 октября 1978 года. Баку. 1978. С.16.</ref>}}

Exactly twenty years later, as the President of independent [[Azerbaijan]], Heydar Aliyev issued a decree condemning March Days as the beginning of Azerbaijani genocide. Text of the 1998 Presidential decree describes the March events as follows:
{{quotation|"Taking advantage of the situation following the end of the First World War and the February and October 1917 revolutions in Russia, the Armenians began to pursue the implementation of their plans under the banner of Bolshevism. Under the watchword of combating counter-revolutionary elements, in March 1918 the Baku commune began to implement a criminal plan aimed at eliminating Azerbaijanis from the whole of Baku province".<ref name="decree"/>}}

=== Soviet position ===
The Baku Soviet's Committee of Revolutionary Defense issued a proclamation early in April explaining the events and their causes. The statement claimed an anti-Soviet character of the rebellion and blamed [[Musavat]] and its leadership for the events. Soviet's statement asserted that there was a carefully laid out conspiracy by [[Musavat]] to overthrow the Baku Soviet and to establish its own regime:

{{quotation|The enemies of Soviet power in the city of Baku have raised their head. The malice and hatred with which they viewed the revolutionary organ of the workers and soldiers began recently to overflow into open counterrevolutionary activities. The appearance of the staff of the Savage Division, headed by the unmasked Talyshkhanov, the events in Lenkoran, in Mugan, and at Shemakha, the capture of Petrovsk by the Daghestan regiment and the withholding of grain shipments from Baku, the threats of Elisavetpol, and in the last few days of Tiflis, to march on Baku, against soviet power, the aggressive movements of the armored train of the Transcaucasian Commissariat in Adzhikabul, and, finally, the outrageous behavior of the Savage Division on the steamship Evelina in shooting comrades--all this speaks of the criminal plans of the counterrevolutionaries grouped mainly around the Bek party Musavat and having as its goal the overthrow of Soviet power." <ref name="rgsunycommune" />}}

Shahumian considered the March events to be a triumph of the Soviet power in the Caucasus:

{{quotation|Transcaucasia has entered a period of active armed struggle for the Soviet power. For three days, 30th, 31 March and 1 April, a furious battle raged in the city of Baku. On one side were fighting the Soviet Red Guard; the Red International Army, recently organized by us; the Red Fleet, which we had succeeded in reorganizing in a short time; and Armenian national units. On the other side the Muslim Savage Division in which there were quite a few Russian officers, and bands of armed Muslims, led by the Musavat Party... For us the results of the battle were brilliant. The destruction of the enemy was complete. We dictated to them the conditions which were signed without reservation. More than three thousand were killed on both sides. The Soviet power in Baku has always been hanging by a thread, due to the resistance of Muslim nationalistic parties. These parties led by feudal intelligentsia (beks and khans), which settled in Elisavetpol and Tiflis thanks to the degraded and cowardly politics of the [[Mensheviks]] became very aggressive in Baku too. ... If they had taken the control of Baku, the city would have been declared the capital of [[Azerbaijan]] and all non-Muslim elements would have been disarmed and killed.<ref>[[Stepan Shahumyan]]. Letters 1896-1918 State Publishing House of Armenia, Yerevan, 1959; pages 63-67.</ref>}}

In the opinion of the American historian Tadeusz Swietochowski, "in his enthusiasm, Shahumyan might not have remembered that in 1905 he himself had accused the [[tsardom]] of reaping in benefits of the [[Armenian–Tatar massacres 1905-1907|Muslim-Armenian massacres]]. It is doubtful that to him, as opposed to the Azerbaijanis, any similarity suggested itself."<ref>{{Harv|Swietochowski|2004|pp=118}}</ref>

[[Joseph Stalin]], who was Bolshevik People's Commissar at the time, tried to justify the provoking of the ''March Days'' by the Baku Soviet in "Pravda" newspaper: ''"While the center of Muslims, Baku, the citadel of Soviet power in Transcaucasus, unified around itself the entire Eastern Transcaucasus, from Lenkoran and Kuba till Elizavetpol, with arms in hands is asserting the rights of people of Transcaucasus, who try by all forces to maintain a link with Soviet Russia"''.<ref>[http://www.hrono.ru/libris/stalin/4-58.html J. Stalin. "Положение на Кавказе", ''Правда'', № 100, May 23, 1918]</ref>

[[Victor Serge]] in ''Year One (First Year) Of the Russian Revolution'': "The Soviet at Baku, led by Shahumyan, was meanwhile making itself the ruler of the area, discreetly but unmistakably. Following the Moslem rising of 18 (30) March, it had to introduce a dictatorship. This rising, instigated by the Musavat, set the Tartar and Turkic population, led by their reactionary bourgeoisie, against the Soviet, which consisted of Russians with support from the Armenians. The races began to slaughter each other in the street. Most of the Turkic port-workers (the ''ambal'') either remained neutral or supported the Reds. The contest was won by the Soviets."

===Armenian position===
The Armenian view of the March 1918 events was documented in a letter written by Archbishop Bagrat to the American mission in [[Baku]]. The letter began with the accusation that the Azerbaijanis, being the disciples of the Turks and the [[Germany|Germans]], could not be trusted. Having thus disposed of the Azerbaijani version of the events, Bagrat stated that the battle was waged by the Musavat and the Soviet, while the Armenians remained neutral. The Archbishop claimed that some Armenian soldiers took part in the fighting, but that those were only isolated individuals for whom the Armenian National Council could not be held responsible.<ref name="kazemzadeh73"/> He also claimed that the Armenians gave shelter to some 20,000 Muslims during the struggle.<ref>Jean Loris-Melikof. ''La revolution russe et les nouvelles Republiques Transcaucasiennes,'' Paris, Felix Alcan, 1920, pp. 115-117.</ref> Persian Armenians in Baku indeed saved many lives of their fellow citizens, which may have been the basis for Bagrat's exaggerated assertion.<ref name="kazemzadeh73"/>

Armenians had been inflamed by the sight and pitiful stories of [[Democratic_Republic_of_Armenia#Refugee_problem|several hundred thousand refugees]] who had succeeded in reaching Transcaucasia, fleeing before the Ottoman Army.<ref name="herb"/> Consequently, when the Russian Army broke up, the Armenians preserved their discipline against all attempts of the Bolsheviks, and were the only force upon which the Allies could count in southwestern Asia during the last year of the war.<ref name="herb"/> The two million Armenians of Transcaucasia, increased by several hundred thousand refugees from the Ottoman Empire, persisted in their loyalty to Russia until the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk delivered them to the Ottoman Empire.<ref name="herb"/> Then they moved to form their own state, which succeeded in maintaining itself during the period of anarchy and famine that Bolshevism brought upon the Russian Empire.<ref name="herb"/> At the [[Paris Peace Conference, 1919|Peace Conference]], speaking before the Council of Ten, [[Avetis Aharonyan|M. Aharonian]], delegate of the [[Democratic Republic of Armenia|Armenian Republic of the Caucasus]], stated that the [[Democratic_Republic_of_Armenia#Population|two and a half million Armenians in Transcaucasia]] wanted to cast in their fortunes with the [[Armenians in the Ottoman Empire|Armenians of Ottoman Empire]] to form a [[Kingdom of Armenia (antiquity)|Greater Armenia]].<ref name="herb">Herbert Adams Gibbons, (1919), The New Map of Asia (1900-1919), Published by The Century co., page 321</ref> According to Michael P. Croissant, the ARF set out to take revenge for the persecution and [[Armenian Genocide|genocide suffered by Armenians]] at the hands of the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]],<ref name="croissant14">Michael P. Croissant. ''The Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict: Causes and Implications'', p. 14. ISBN 0-275-96241-5</ref> while Tadeusz Swietochowski states that "Armenian historians do not offer an explanation for the political calculations behind this move, which was bound to entail terrible retribution, and they hint rather at an uncontrollable emotional outburst".<ref>Tadeusz Swietochowski, Russia and Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition. ISBN 0-231-07068-3</ref>

===Other positions===
According to [[Firuz Kazemzadeh]], the Soviet provoked March events to eliminate its most formidable rival - the Musavat. However, when Soviet leaders reached out to ARF for assistance against the Azerbaijani nationalists, the conflict degenerated into a massacre with the Armenians killing the Muslims irrespective of their political affiliations or social and economic position.<ref>{{Harv|Kazemzadeh|1950|pp=75}}</ref>

===International recognition===
On March 27, 2012, the [[New York State Senate]] adopted the first-ever legislative resolution J3784-2011 proclaiming March 31, 2012 as the Azerbaijani Remembrance Day and describing March Days as the genocide "committed by the members of Armenian Dashnak party in concert with Bolsheviks against Azerbaijanis".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://open.nysenate.gov/legislation/bill/J3784-2011 |title=J3784-2011: Memorializing Governor Andrew M. Cuomo to proclaim Saturday, March 31, 2012 as Azerbaijani Remembrance Day in the State of New York |last1= |first1= |last2= |first2= |date=March 27, 2012 |work= |publisher=The New York State Senate |accessdate=30 June 2012}}</ref> The resolution was introduced by the State Senator [[James Alesi]] at the initiative of the members of Azerbaijan Society of America and Azerbaijani-American Council.<ref>{{cite news |title=New York State Senate adopts resolution proclaiming March 31 as remembrance day of Azerbaijanis subjected to genocide |author= |url=http://www.azertag.com/en/node/971610 |newspaper=AzerTAg State News Agency |date=June 24, 2012 |accessdate=June 30, 2012}}</ref>

On December 31, 2010, Governor [[Jim Gibbons (U.S. politician)|Jim Gibbons]] of the U.S. State of [[Nevada]] proclaimed March 31 as Remembrance Day of the 1918 [[massacre]]s of Azerbaijani civilians in what became the first such recognition by the U.S. government institution.<ref>{{cite web|title=Nevada governor proclaims 31 March Azerbaijani Remembrance Day|url=http://www.news.az/articles/politics/29254|publisher=news.az|accessdate=4 January 2011}}</ref>

==See also==
*[[List of massacres in Azerbaijan]]
*[[Azerbaijan Democratic Republic]]
*[[September Days]]

== Notes ==
<references group=notes/>

==References==
{{reflist|30em}}

== Bibliography ==
* {{cite book |title=The Struggle for Transcaucasia (1917-1921) |last=Kazemzadeh |first=Firuz |year=1950 |publisher=Anglo Caspian Press Lted |isbn=978-0-9560004-0-8 |pages=360 |url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/Struggle-Transcaucasia-1917-1921-Firuz-Kazemzadeh/dp/0956000401 |ref=CITEREFKazemzadeh1950}}
* {{cite book |title=The Azerbaijani Turks: power and identity under Russian rule. |last=Alstatdt |first=Audrey L. |year=1992 |url=http://books.google.com/?id=sZVN2MwWZVAC |publisher=Hoover Press |isbn=978-0-8179-9182-1 |ref=CITEREFAltstadt1992}}
* {{cite book |title=Революция и гражданская война в Баку, 1917-1918 |last=Ratgauzer |first=Iakov A. |year=1927 |publisher=Красный Восток |isbn= |pages= |url= |ref=CITEREFRatgauzer1927}}
* {{cite book |title=Russian Azerbaijan, 1905-1920: The Shaping of a National Identity in a Muslim Community |last=Swietochowski |first=Tadeusz |year=2004 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |url= |isbn=978-0-521-52245-8 |ref=CITEREFSwietochowski2004}}
* {{cite book |title=The Baku Commune |last=Suny |first=Ronald Grigor |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1972 |publisher=Princeton University Press |location= |isbn=978-0-691-05193-2 |page= |pages=217–221 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=bptnQgAACAAJ |ref=CITEREFSuny1972}}
* {{cite news |first=Dudley S.|last=Northcote |title=Saving Forty Thousand Armenians |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=4LYqAAAAYAAJ&client=firefox-a&pg=RA1-PA788&ci=115,164,809,150&source=bookclip |work=Current History |publisher=New York Times Co.,|year=1922 |accessdate=12 December 2008 |ref=CITEREFNorthcote1922}}
*{{cite book |title=Why Armenia Should be Free: Armenia's Role in the Present War |last=Pasdermadjian |first=Garegin |authorlink=Karekin Pastermadjian |coauthors= |year=1918 |pages=188–199 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=-ZQiAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA188 |publisher=The Armenian National Union of America |ref=CITEREFPasdermadjian1918}}
*{{cite journal |last=Balayev |first=Aydin |date=October 2008 |title=A Defining Moment For Azerbaijan. |journal=Azerbaijan in the World |volume=I |issue=18 |pages= |id= |url=http://www.ada.edu.az/biweekly/issues/157/20090328073208910.html}}

{{Azerbaijan topics}}

{{coord missing|Azerbaijan}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2010}}

[[Category:Russian Revolution]]
[[Category:History of Azerbaijan]]
[[Category:Massacres in Azerbaijan]]
[[Category:History of Baku]]
[[Category:Mass murder in 1918]]
[[Category:Persecution of Ottoman Muslims]]

Revision as of 17:15, 13 April 2014

March Days
Part of Russian Civil War

Azerbaijani victims in Baku
Date30 March – 2 April 1918
Location
Result Bolshevik–ARF victory
Belligerents
Bolsheviks
Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Musavat Party
Russia Savage Division
Commanders and leaders
Stepan Shahumyan
Strength
Bolsheviks
6,000 regular troops, Russian Fleet gunboats[1]
ARF
4,000 militiamen[1]
10,000 troops and militiamen[1]
Casualties and losses
2,500 ARF soldiers[2] between 3,000 to 12,000 Azerbaijanis and other Muslims including civilians massacred

The March Days, or March Events, refer to an inter-ethnic strife and massacres of between 3000[3] to 12,000[4][5] Azerbaijanis and other Muslims[6] that took place between March 30 and April 2, 1918 in the city of Baku and adjacent areas of the Baku Governorate of the Russian Empire.[7]

Facilitated by a political power struggle between Bolsheviks with support of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutiun)[8][9][10] on one side and Azerbaijani Musavat Party on another, the events led to a suppression of Muslim revolt[11] by Bolshevik and Dashnak forces[12][13] and establishment of a short-lived Baku Commune in April 1918.[14]

Azerbaijan officially refers to March Days as soyqırım ('genocide').[15][16] Other sources interpret the March events in the context of civil war unrest.[17]

Background

Political situation

Following the February Revolution, a Special Transcaucasian Committee, including Armenian, Azerbaijani and Georgian representatives, was established to administer parts of the South Caucasus under the control of the Russian Provisional Government. After the October Revolution, on November 11, 1917, this committee was replaced by the Transcaucasian Commissariat, also known as the Sejm, with headquarters in Tiflis. The Sejm opposed Bolsheviks and sought separation of the South Caucasus from Bolshevik Russia. To prevent that, on November 13, 1917, a group of Bolsheviks and Left Socialist-Revolutionaries (SR) proclaimed the Baku Soviet, a governing body which assumed power over the territory of Baku Governorate under the leadership of Bolshevik Stepan Shahumyan. Although the Baku Soviet included Azerbaijanis and Armenians who were neither Bolsheviks nor necessarily sympathetic towards the Bolshevik ideas,[1] the two nationalist parties and members of the Sejm ― the Musavat[18] and Armenian Revolutionary Federation ― refused to recognize its authority. The Baku-based Musavat dominated Muslim National Councils (MNCs), a representative body which eventually formed the first Parliament of Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (ADR). Mammad Hasan Hajinski chaired the Temporary Executive Committee for the MNCs, while Mammed Amin Rasulzade, Alimardan Topchubashev, Fatali Khan Khoyski and other prominent political figures were among the 44 Azerbaijani delegates to the Sejm. Meanwhile, the ARF, which was established in Tiflis, formed a 27-member Armenian delegation to the Sejm. The leader of the Baku Soviet, Shahumyan, kept contacts with ARF and viewed it as a source of support for eliminating Musavat influence in Baku.[19] It is noteworthy that during the March Days of 1918, one of the ARF founders, Stepan Zorian, was present in Baku.

Stepan Shahumyan, an ethnic Armenian leader of the Bolshevik Baku Soviet

After the October Revolution, the Russian army fell apart and its units fled the front lines en masse, often harassing local residents. Concerned with the situation, the Sejm established a Military Council of Nationalities, with Armenian, Azerbaijani and Georgian representatives, which had troops at its disposal.[20] When a large group of Russian soldiers withdrew from the Ottoman front line in January 1918, the head of the council, Georgian Menshevik Noe Ramishvili, ordered to disarm them. The Russian soldiers were stopped near Shamkhor station and, upon a refusal to surrender, were attacked by Azerbaijani bands in what became known as the Shamkhor massacre.[20] The Baku Soviet played out this incident into its favor against the Sejm[notes 1]

On February 10–24, 1918, the Sejm adopted a declaration of independence, proclaiming the Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic. In the mean time, to support Armenian resistance against the Ottoman Empire, the British government attempted to re-organize and train a group of Armenians from the Caucasus under the leadership of General Lionel Dunsterville in Baghdad.[21] The Allies had also provided Armenians with 6,500,000 rubles ($3,250,000 of 1918 value) in financial assistance.[22] In addition, the Armenian National Organization of the Caucasus formed an Armenian Military Committee in Petrograd under General Bagradouni and called upon all Armenian military personnel scattered throughout Russia to mobilize on the Caucasus front.[23] In response to this call, by early March 1918, a large number of Armenians gathered in Baku, joining a group of 200 trained officers accompanied by General Bagradouni and the ARF co-founder Stepan Zorian (Mr. Rostom).[23]

The Azerbaijanis grew increasingly suspicious that Shahumyan, who was an ethnic Armenian, conspired with the Dashnaks against them. The units of Savage Division, composed of Caucasian Muslims who served in the Imperial Russian Army, disarmed a pro-Bolshevik garrison in Lankaran, and Dagestani insurgents under Imam Najm ul-din Gotsinski drove the Bolsheviks out of Petrovsk, severing Baku's land communications with the Bolshevik Russia.[24] The Armistice of Erzincan, followed by the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk signed on March 3, 1918, formalized Russia's exit from World War I. According to Richard G. Hovannisian, a secret annex to the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk obligated the Bolsheviks to demobilize and dissolve ethnic Armenian bands on territories previously under Russian control.[25] At the subsequent Trabzon Peace Conference, the Ottoman delegation called for a unified position of the Sejm before the negotiations could be completed. The Bolsheviks grew increasingly concerned about the emerging Transcaucasian Federation, and in a given situation, had to choose between Musavat and ARF in the struggle to dominate Transcaucasia's largest city. Thus the Baku Soviet was drawn into the nationalistic struggle between the Azerbaijanis and the Armenians, trying to utilize one people against the other.[26]

As Baku produced 7 million tons of oil per year (about 15% of the global oil production), during World War I the city remained in sight of the major warring powers. Even though most of the oil fields were owned by Azerbaijanis and less than 5 per cent by Armenians, most of the production/distribution rights in Baku were owned by foreign investors, primarily the British. At the beginning of 1918, Germans transferred General Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein from the Sinai and Palestine Campaign to establish the German Caucasus Expedition with the aim of capturing Baku. In response, in February 1918, the British dispatched General Lionel Dunsterville with troops to Baku through Enzeli, in order to block the German move and to protect the British investments.[27] Meanwhile, the Bolsheviks lost control of Grozny oilfields at the end of 1917, and Baku became the single source of oil. Lenin even asserted in one of his speeches that "Soviet Russia can't survive without Baku oil."[citation needed]

Demographics and armed groups

Postcard from Iran. Iranian consul M.S. Vezare-Maragai near muslim (Azerbaijani) victims in Baku after March days

Before World War I, the population of Baku, including the Bailoff promontory, the White Town, the oil fields and the neighboring villages, amounted to over 200,000 and distributed as follows: 74,000 temporary migrants from various parts of Russia, 56,000 Azerbaijani natives of the town and district, 25,000 Armenians, 18,000 Persians, 6,000 Jews, 4,000 Volga Tatars, 3,800 Lezgins, 2,600 Georgians, 5,000 Germans, 1,500 Poles and many other nationalities numbering less than 1,000 each. Azerbaijanis formed the majority among natives and owned the greater part of land including the oil fields. They also constituted most of the labor force and small trading class as well as some commercial and financial posts. The petroleum industry was largely owned by a small number of foreign capitalists.[28]

Prior to 1918 March events, the major armed groups in Baku consisted of 6,000 men from the remnants of Russian Caucasus Army that withdrew from the Ottoman front line, about 4,000 men of the Armenian militia organized under the ARF Dashnaktsutiun,[29] and an undefined number of soldiers of the Savage Division disbanded in January 1918.[30]

Events of March 30 - April 2, 1918

Bazarnaya Street (modern day Azerbaijan Avenue) during the March days in 1918.

When the staff of the disbanded Savage Division arrived in Baku on March 9, 1918, the Soviet immediately arrested its commander, General Talyshinski. The move sparked protests from Azerbaijani population, with occasional calls to offer armed resistance to the Soviet. According to Firuz Kazemzadeh, Shahumyan could have prevented bloodshed, had he been less impulsive and stubborn. Only a few days earlier, Shahumyan received a telegram from Lenin, in which he was advised "to learn diplomacy", but this advice was ignored.[notes 2]

The March 1918 confrontation was triggered by an incident with the steamship "Evelina". On March 27, 1918, fifty former Savage Division servicemen arrived in Baku on board of this steamship, to attend the funeral of their colleague Mamed Tagiyev, son of a famous Azerbaijani oil magnate and philanthropist Haji Zeynalabdin Taghiyev. M. Tagiyev was killed in a skirmish with the Russian-Armenian forces in Lenkoran.[7][31] Some sources state that when soldiers got back on the "Evelina" to sail out of Baku on March 30, 1918, the Soviet received information that the Muslim crew of the ship was armed and waiting for a signal to revolt against the Soviet. While the report lacked foundation, the Soviet acted on it, disarming the crew which tried to resist.[32][33][34] Other sources claim that [notes 3] Azerbaijanis were alarmed by the growing military strength of the Armenians in Baku, and called for help of the Savage division units in Lenkoran. Their arrival caused great concerns among both Bolsheviks and Armenians, and when officials were sent down to the dockside to try to discover what their intentions were, they were driven back by gunfire, a number of them being killed. Eventually, however, these Savage Division soldiers were disarmed by a stronger Bolshevik force.[1]

Ismailiyya building

By 6 p.m. on March 30, 1918, Baku was filled with fighting. Trenches were being dug, barricades erected, and preparations made for warfare.[35] The Soviet side, led by Shahumyan, realized that full civil war was starting and its own forces were insufficient against Azerbaijani masses led by Musavat. Allies were found among the Mensheviks, SRs, and the Kadets (right-wing liberals), which promised support the Bolsheviks as the champions of the "Russian Cause."[36] In response to these, Musavat's Achiq Söz newspaper noted that while Bolsheviks and Mensheviks were fighting all year, both were uniting against Musavat even with the Kadets and the Dashnaks. The paper attributed such alliance to national factors, and concluded that the Soviet's attempt to provoke "one nationality against another, instead of fighting a class war, was a tragic capitulation of democracy".[37]

In the morning of March 31, Azerbaijanis opposed to the Bolshevik disarming of Savage Division held protests in Baku, demanding to arm the Muslims. The Azerbaijani Bolshevik organization Hümmet attempted to mediate the dispute by proposing that the arms taken from the Savage Division are transferred to the custody of the Hümmet. Shahumyan agreed to this proposal. But on the afternoon of March 31, when Muslim representatives appeared before the Baku Soviet leadership to take the arms, shots were already heard in the city and the Soviet commissar Prokofy Dzhaparidze refused to provide arms and informed the Hümmet leadership that "Musavat had launched a political war".[34][38] The talks broke off abruptly after the Soviet's soldiers were fired upon. Bolsheviks accused the Muslims in the incident, stopped negotiations, and opened hostilities. Later Shahumyan admitted that the Bolsheviks deliberately used a pretext to attack their political opponents:

We needed to give a rebuff, and we exploited the opportunity of the first attempt at an armed assault on our cavalry unit and began an attack on the whole front. Due to the efforts of both the local Soviet and the Military-revolutionary committee of the Caucasus Army, which moved here (from Tiflis and Sarikamish) we already had armed forces - about 6,000 strong. Dashnaktsutiun also had 3,000 - 4,000 strong national forces, which were at our disposal. The participation of the latter lent the civil war, to some extent, the character of an ethnic massacre, however, it was impossible to avoid it. We were going for it deliberately. The Muslim poor suffered severely, however they are now rallying around the Bolsheviks and the Soviet.[29]

Armenians initially remained neutral as the Muslim rebellion against the Soviet began. The Musavat Party proposed an alliance with the Dashnaks, but was given a rebuff. The Armenian leadership withdrew its forces to the Armenian areas of Baku and limited its action to self-defense. On the evening of March 31, machine-gun and rifle fire in Baku intensified into a full-fledged battle.[38] On the morning of April 1, 1918, the Committee of Revolutionary Defense of Baku's Soviet issued a leaflet which said:

In view of the fact that the counterrevolutionary Musavat party declared war on the Soviet of Workers', Soldiers', and Sailors' Deputies in the city of Baku and thus threatened the existence of the government of the revolutionary democracy, Baku is declared to be in a state of siege[38]

Forced to seek support from either Muslim Musavat or Armenian Dashnaktsutyun, Shahumyan, himself an Armenian, chose the latter. Following initial skirmishes in the streets, the Dashnaks proceeded to initiate a massacre, wildly killing Musavat military elements and Muslim civilians alike without mercy or discrimination in both Baku and the surrounding countryside.[39]

No quarter was given by either side: neither age nor sex was respected. Enormous crowds roamed the streets, burning houses, killing every passer-by who was identified as an enemy, many innocent persons suffering death at the hands of both the Armenians and Azerbaijanis. The struggle which had begun as a political contest between the Musavat and the Soviet turned into a gigantic ethnic-religious riot.[40] There were descriptions of Dashnak forces taking to looting, burning and killing in the Muslim sections of the city.[41] According to Peter Hopkirk, "Armenians, seeing that at last they had their ancient foes on the run, were now out for vengeance".[1] In Balakhany and Ramany districts of Baku, the majority of Muslim workers stayed at their places and avoided the battles, while the peasants were not moved to join the anti-Soviet rebels. The Persian workers remained passive during all of the fighting, refusing to take sides.[38] Left-wing Muslim leaders, including those of SRs and Hümmet Party, such as Narimanov, Azizbekov, Bunyat Sardarov and Kazi-Magomed Aghasiyev, supported the Soviet forces[42] During the battles, Bolsheviks decided to use artillery against the Azerbaijani residential quarters in the city.[34]

On the afternoon on April 1, a Muslim delegation arrived at the Hotel Astoria. The Committee of Revolutionary Defense presented them with an ultimatum[notes 4] and demanded that representatives of all Muslim parties sign the document before the shelling stopped. Early in the evening, the agreements were signed and the bombardment stopped.[38] The fighting did not subside, however, till the night of April 2, 1918, when thousands of Muslims started leaving the city in a mass exodus. By the fifth day, although much of the city was still ablaze, all resistance had ceased, leaving the streets strewn with dead and wounded, nearly all of them Muslims.[1] So the armed conflict between the Musavat and the joint Soviet-ARF forces ended on March 3, 1918 with the victory of the latter.

Casualties

Removing the dead from the streets

The May 1918 dispatch of the New York Times stated that "2000 were killed and 3000 were wounded in struggle between Russians and Mussulmans".[43] Later 1919 publication by the New York Times concluded that 12,000 people were killed during the March Days of 1918.[44] The same publication wrote that according to Azerbaijani representatives, Bolsheviks crushed Muslims with assistance from Armenians who wanted to "wipe out old enemies and seize their lands".[44] The post-1920 New York Times editions used the same figure of 12,000 victims,[6] as did several historians.[4][5]

Azerbaijani delegation to the 1919 Paris Peace Conference provided the following interpretation of the March Days:

In that bloodthirsty episode, which had such fatal effects upon the Muslims, the principal part was played by the Armenians, who were then in Baku, clustering as elsewhere around their nationalist party [ARF]... The truth is that the Armenians under the guise of Bolshevism, rushed on the Muslims and massacred during a few frightful days more than 12,000 people, many of whom were old men, women, and children.[45]

The leader of Baku Soviet, Stepan Shahumyan, claimed that more than 3,000 killed in two days.[34][46][47][notes 5] However, in his October 1918 article for the Armenian Herald, publication of the Boston-based Armenian National Union of America, one of the prominent ARF leaders, Karekin Pastermadjian, asserted that over 10,000 Azerbaijanis and nearly 2,500 Armenians were killed during the March Days of 1918.[notes 6]

Aftermath

The aftermath in the Azerbaijani quarter

In the immediate aftermath of the March Days, many of the Muslim survivors fled to Elisabethpol (Ganja) in central Azerbaijan. While the Temporary Executive Committee of the Muslim National Councils and the Musavat ceased their activities on the territory of the Baku Governorate, the left-wing Azerbaijani political groups, such as the SRs and the Hümmet, benefited from the developments and became effective leaders of the Azerbaijani community in Baku. The Muslim Socialist Bureau appealed to the Committee of Revolutionary Defense to redress some of the grievances of some of the Muslims.[38]

On April 13, 1918, within few days of the massacres, the Bolsheviks under the leadership of Stepan Shahumyan proclaimed the Baku Commune. This new body endeavored to nationalize Baku's oil fields, drawing ire from the British,[27] and to form the "Red Army of Baku", an undisciplined and poorly managed force composed largely of ethnic Armenian recruits.[48] Although the majority of the Commissars (leaders of Baku Commune) were ethnic Armenians, two of them were ethnic Azeri revolutionaries, Meshadi Azizbekov and Mir Hasan Vazirov. Nevertheless, in Azeri psyche, the Baku Commune symbolized the Bolshevik - Armenian collusion born out of the March Days bloodbath.[49]

March Days of 1918 had a profound effect on the formulation of Azerbaijani political objectives as well. While before Azerbaijani leaders only sought an autonomy within the Russian domain, after the Bolshevik-perpetrated massacres in Baku, they no longer believed in Russian Revolution and turned to the Ottomans for support in achieving total independence.[50] Therefore when Azerbaijan Democratic Republic was proclaimed on May 28, 1918, its government immediately dispatched a delegation to Istanbul for discussing a possibility of the Ottoman military support for the young republic. The Ottoman triumvir, Enver Pasha, agreed to Azerbaijani requests and charged his brother, Nuru Pasha, with forming an Ottoman military unit, known as the Caucasus Army of Islam, to retake Baku. When in July 1918, the Ottoman-Azerbaijani force defeated the "Red Army of Baku" in several key battles in Central Azerbaijan, Bolshevik power in Baku started crumbling under pressure from the Russian Socialist Revolutionaries, Dashnaks and British agents in the city. On August 1, 1918, the Baku Commune was replaced by the Centrocaspian Dictatorship, which desperately invited a 1000-strong British expeditionary force led by General Lionel Dunsterville to the city. But this was a futile effort and, in face of an overwhelming Ottoman-Azerbaijani offensive, the Dunsterforce fled and the Caucasus Army of Islam entered the Azerbaijani capital on September 15, 1918.

The March Days brought the underlying tension between the Armenians and Azerbaijanis to the fore. Less than six months after the March massacres, when the Ottoman-Azerbaijani force entered Baku, the city fell into chaos and nearly 10,000 Armenians were massacred.[51] A special commission formed by the Armenian National Council (ANC) reported a total of 8,988 ethnic Armenians massacred, among which were 5,248 Armenian inhabitants of Baku, 1,500 Armenian refugees from other parts of the Caucasus who were in Baku, and 2,240 Armenians whose corpses were found in the streets but whose identities were never established.[52] Although these figures were gathered by the Armenian National Council, and have been questioned by some,[52] given the general run of events, they were unlikely to be too exaggerated.[53]

While trying to escape Baku amidst the Ottoman-Azerbaijani offensive, the Bolshevik Baku Commissars were taken by a ship across the Caspian to Krasnovodsk, where they were imprisoned by the Social Revolutionary Transcaspian Government with alleged support of the British. Few days later, on September 20, 1918, between the stations of Pereval and Akhcha-Kuyma on the Trans-Caspian railway, 26 of the Commissars were executed by a firing squad.[51]

Analysis and interpretations

According to Michael Smith, Muslims faced a crushing defeat at the hands of Baku Soviet followed by an "unrestrained brutality of Dashnak forces".[7] While in the aftermath of the tragic events, Musavat used them to foster a national memory of pain, its leader M. E. Rasulzade provided an analysis which seems to reflect the essence of witness accounts. In Rasulzade's view, Bolsheviks and their supporters sought to diminish Musavat's influence among Azerbaijani masses for a long time, and Muslim elites felt frustrated and powerless in face of this pressure. March Days were a violent culmination in this assault of Russian Bolshevism against the unprepared Azerbaijani people.[7]

Azerbaijani position

Azeri sources say that the "Greater Armenia" was used in order to "justify" the attempts to create this artificial state on Azerbaijani land[15]

The leader of Musavat Mammed Amin Rasulzade stated with regard to the March Days:

Musavat was blamed for the March events. It is absolutely baseless, because to declare a war one must possess at least some physical strength, which Musavat lacked. Others accuse Musavat that it provoked the March events by defending the idea of autonomy for Azerbaijan. This could resemble the truth to a certain extent. If we obediently bowed to the enemies of our freedom, these events might not have happened. But we could not have done that. We openly claimed the autonomy for Azerbaijan, and this increased the number of our enemies.[54]

In Soviet Azerbaijan, historical accounts of March Days were made to support the actions of Baku Soviet and to condemn Musavat as the culprit of the tragedy. Soviet historiography also tried to suppress the memory of 1918 massacres and omitted the fact that Bolsheviks used the Armenian-Azerbaijani ethnic confrontation to gain power. However, in 1978, then-leader of Soviet Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev recalled the forgotten March Days in his speech dedicated to the 100th anniversary of Stepan Shahumyan as follows:

In March 1918, the Musavatist anti-Soviet rebellion was raised in Baku, intending to strangle the Soviet Government. Thanks to the firm and resolute action of the Bolsheviks, however, the rebellion was extinguished." [55]

Exactly twenty years later, as the President of independent Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev issued a decree condemning March Days as the beginning of Azerbaijani genocide. Text of the 1998 Presidential decree describes the March events as follows:

"Taking advantage of the situation following the end of the First World War and the February and October 1917 revolutions in Russia, the Armenians began to pursue the implementation of their plans under the banner of Bolshevism. Under the watchword of combating counter-revolutionary elements, in March 1918 the Baku commune began to implement a criminal plan aimed at eliminating Azerbaijanis from the whole of Baku province".[15]

Soviet position

The Baku Soviet's Committee of Revolutionary Defense issued a proclamation early in April explaining the events and their causes. The statement claimed an anti-Soviet character of the rebellion and blamed Musavat and its leadership for the events. Soviet's statement asserted that there was a carefully laid out conspiracy by Musavat to overthrow the Baku Soviet and to establish its own regime:

The enemies of Soviet power in the city of Baku have raised their head. The malice and hatred with which they viewed the revolutionary organ of the workers and soldiers began recently to overflow into open counterrevolutionary activities. The appearance of the staff of the Savage Division, headed by the unmasked Talyshkhanov, the events in Lenkoran, in Mugan, and at Shemakha, the capture of Petrovsk by the Daghestan regiment and the withholding of grain shipments from Baku, the threats of Elisavetpol, and in the last few days of Tiflis, to march on Baku, against soviet power, the aggressive movements of the armored train of the Transcaucasian Commissariat in Adzhikabul, and, finally, the outrageous behavior of the Savage Division on the steamship Evelina in shooting comrades--all this speaks of the criminal plans of the counterrevolutionaries grouped mainly around the Bek party Musavat and having as its goal the overthrow of Soviet power." [38]

Shahumian considered the March events to be a triumph of the Soviet power in the Caucasus:

Transcaucasia has entered a period of active armed struggle for the Soviet power. For three days, 30th, 31 March and 1 April, a furious battle raged in the city of Baku. On one side were fighting the Soviet Red Guard; the Red International Army, recently organized by us; the Red Fleet, which we had succeeded in reorganizing in a short time; and Armenian national units. On the other side the Muslim Savage Division in which there were quite a few Russian officers, and bands of armed Muslims, led by the Musavat Party... For us the results of the battle were brilliant. The destruction of the enemy was complete. We dictated to them the conditions which were signed without reservation. More than three thousand were killed on both sides. The Soviet power in Baku has always been hanging by a thread, due to the resistance of Muslim nationalistic parties. These parties led by feudal intelligentsia (beks and khans), which settled in Elisavetpol and Tiflis thanks to the degraded and cowardly politics of the Mensheviks became very aggressive in Baku too. ... If they had taken the control of Baku, the city would have been declared the capital of Azerbaijan and all non-Muslim elements would have been disarmed and killed.[56]

In the opinion of the American historian Tadeusz Swietochowski, "in his enthusiasm, Shahumyan might not have remembered that in 1905 he himself had accused the tsardom of reaping in benefits of the Muslim-Armenian massacres. It is doubtful that to him, as opposed to the Azerbaijanis, any similarity suggested itself."[57]

Joseph Stalin, who was Bolshevik People's Commissar at the time, tried to justify the provoking of the March Days by the Baku Soviet in "Pravda" newspaper: "While the center of Muslims, Baku, the citadel of Soviet power in Transcaucasus, unified around itself the entire Eastern Transcaucasus, from Lenkoran and Kuba till Elizavetpol, with arms in hands is asserting the rights of people of Transcaucasus, who try by all forces to maintain a link with Soviet Russia".[58]

Victor Serge in Year One (First Year) Of the Russian Revolution: "The Soviet at Baku, led by Shahumyan, was meanwhile making itself the ruler of the area, discreetly but unmistakably. Following the Moslem rising of 18 (30) March, it had to introduce a dictatorship. This rising, instigated by the Musavat, set the Tartar and Turkic population, led by their reactionary bourgeoisie, against the Soviet, which consisted of Russians with support from the Armenians. The races began to slaughter each other in the street. Most of the Turkic port-workers (the ambal) either remained neutral or supported the Reds. The contest was won by the Soviets."

Armenian position

The Armenian view of the March 1918 events was documented in a letter written by Archbishop Bagrat to the American mission in Baku. The letter began with the accusation that the Azerbaijanis, being the disciples of the Turks and the Germans, could not be trusted. Having thus disposed of the Azerbaijani version of the events, Bagrat stated that the battle was waged by the Musavat and the Soviet, while the Armenians remained neutral. The Archbishop claimed that some Armenian soldiers took part in the fighting, but that those were only isolated individuals for whom the Armenian National Council could not be held responsible.[40] He also claimed that the Armenians gave shelter to some 20,000 Muslims during the struggle.[59] Persian Armenians in Baku indeed saved many lives of their fellow citizens, which may have been the basis for Bagrat's exaggerated assertion.[40]

Armenians had been inflamed by the sight and pitiful stories of several hundred thousand refugees who had succeeded in reaching Transcaucasia, fleeing before the Ottoman Army.[60] Consequently, when the Russian Army broke up, the Armenians preserved their discipline against all attempts of the Bolsheviks, and were the only force upon which the Allies could count in southwestern Asia during the last year of the war.[60] The two million Armenians of Transcaucasia, increased by several hundred thousand refugees from the Ottoman Empire, persisted in their loyalty to Russia until the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk delivered them to the Ottoman Empire.[60] Then they moved to form their own state, which succeeded in maintaining itself during the period of anarchy and famine that Bolshevism brought upon the Russian Empire.[60] At the Peace Conference, speaking before the Council of Ten, M. Aharonian, delegate of the Armenian Republic of the Caucasus, stated that the two and a half million Armenians in Transcaucasia wanted to cast in their fortunes with the Armenians of Ottoman Empire to form a Greater Armenia.[60] According to Michael P. Croissant, the ARF set out to take revenge for the persecution and genocide suffered by Armenians at the hands of the Ottomans,[61] while Tadeusz Swietochowski states that "Armenian historians do not offer an explanation for the political calculations behind this move, which was bound to entail terrible retribution, and they hint rather at an uncontrollable emotional outburst".[62]

Other positions

According to Firuz Kazemzadeh, the Soviet provoked March events to eliminate its most formidable rival - the Musavat. However, when Soviet leaders reached out to ARF for assistance against the Azerbaijani nationalists, the conflict degenerated into a massacre with the Armenians killing the Muslims irrespective of their political affiliations or social and economic position.[63]

International recognition

On March 27, 2012, the New York State Senate adopted the first-ever legislative resolution J3784-2011 proclaiming March 31, 2012 as the Azerbaijani Remembrance Day and describing March Days as the genocide "committed by the members of Armenian Dashnak party in concert with Bolsheviks against Azerbaijanis".[64] The resolution was introduced by the State Senator James Alesi at the initiative of the members of Azerbaijan Society of America and Azerbaijani-American Council.[65]

On December 31, 2010, Governor Jim Gibbons of the U.S. State of Nevada proclaimed March 31 as Remembrance Day of the 1918 massacres of Azerbaijani civilians in what became the first such recognition by the U.S. government institution.[66]

See also

Notes

  1. ^

    Here is what Bakinsky Rabochy reports about it:

    In the first half of January 1918, on the railway line between Tiflis and Yelizavetpol, armed bands of Moslems many thousand strong, headed by members of the Yelizavetpol Moslem National Committee and with the support of an armoured train sent by the Transcaucasian Commissariat, forcibly disarmed a number of military units leaving for Russia. Thousands of Russian soldiers were killed or mutilated; the railway line was strewn with their corpses. They were deprived of about 15,000 rifles, some 70 machine guns and a score of artillery pieces.

    — Joseph Stalin (26–27 March 1918). "Transcaucasian Counter-revolutionaries Under a Socialist Mask". Marxists Internet Archive.
  2. ^

    Dear Comrade Shahumyan:
    Many thanks for the letter. We are delighted by your firm and decisive policy; do unite with it a most cautious diplomacy, which is doubtlessly made necessary by the present most difficult situation, and we shall win.
    The difficulties are unfathomable; up to now we have been saved by the contradictions and conflicts and the struggle among imperialists. Be able to use these conflicts; now it is necessary to learn diplomacy.
    Best wishes and greetings to all the friends.

    — V. Ulyanov (Lenin), Stepan Shahumyan, Статьи и речи, Bakinskii Rabochii, Articles and speeches of the Bolshevik Extraordinary Commissar for the Caucasus, 1924, p. 224
  3. ^

    Peter Hopkirk:
    alarmed by the growing military strength of the Armenians, to which British founding had undoubtedly contributed, the Baku Muslims had secretly sought help from their co-religionists elsewhere. Among those who responded were units of the all-Muslim Savage Division, which had until the Revolution formed part of the Tsarist forces. Flushed by their success in overthrowing the Bolshevik garrison at the Caspian port of Lenkoran, some detachments now set sail for Baku. Their arrival, on March 30, caused great consternation among both Bolsheviks and Armenians. When officials were sent down to the dockside to try to discover what their intentions were, they were driven back by gunfire, a number of them being killed. Eventually however, the newcomers were disarmed by a stronger Bolshevik force. But then more units of the Savage Division arrived on April 1, in MacDonell's words, "the Baku cauldron boiled over". No one really knows who fired the first shot, but very soon it had become a battlefield, with trenches and barricades being hastily prepared everywhere.

    — Peter Hopkirk, Claims of the Peace Delegation of the Republic of Caucasian Azerbaijan presented to the Peace Conference in Paris, Paris, 1919, pp. 18–19.
  4. ^

    The contents of the ultimatum presented by the Bolsheviks and accepted by the Musavat:

    We demand the immediate end of the military activity opened against Soviet power in the city of Baku; we demand the immediate surrender of fortified posts and the destruction of trenches. In order to avoid repetition in the future of such acts, the Committee of Revolutionary Defense demands:

    1. Open and unconditional recognition of the power of the Baku Soviet of Workers, Soldiers, and Sailors Deputies and the complete subordination to all its orders.
    2. The "Savage Division" as a counterrevolutionary military units cannot be tolerated with the bounds of Baku and its districts. Other national Moslem military units, as well as Armenian ones, should be either led out of the city or subordinated completely to the Soviet. Whole armed population must be under the control and check of the Soviet.

    3. We demand the acceptance of immediate measures to open the railroads from Baku to Tiflis and from Baku to Petrovsk.

    — (Suny 1972, pp. 217–221)
  5. ^

    On one side were fighting the Soviet Red Guard; the Red International Army, recently organized by us; the Red Fleet, which we had succeeded in reorganizing in a short time; and Armenian national units. On the other side the Muslim Savage Division in which there were quite a few Russian officers, and bands of armed Muslims, led by the Musavat Party... For us the results of the battle were brilliant. The destruction of the enemy was complete... More than three thousand were killed on both sides

    — Stepan Shahumyan. Letters 1896-1918. State Publishing House of Armenia, Yerevan, 1959; pages 63-67
  6. ^

    The leaders of the Tartars at Baku were convinced that they would easily disarm the Armenian soldiers, because they were somewhat shut up in Baku, but they were sadly mistaken in their calculations. After a bloody battle which lasted a whole week the Armenians remained masters of the city and its oil wells. They suffered a loss of nearly 2,500 killed, while Tartars lost more than 10,000. The commander of the military forces of the Armenians was the same General Bagradouni, who, although he lost both of his legs during the fight, continued his duties until September 14, when the Armenians and the small number of Englishmen who came to their assistance, were forced to abandon Baku to the superior forces of the Turco-Tartars, and retreat toward the city of Enzeli in the northern Caucasus

    — (Pasdermadjian 1918, pp. 193)

References

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  2. ^ (Pasdermadjian 1918, pp. 193)
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  13. ^ Suny, Ronald Grigor (1993). The revenge of the past:nationalism, revolution, and the collapse of the Soviet Union. Stanford University Press. p. 42. ISBN 0-8047-2247-1. After crushing a Muslim revolt in the city, the Bolshevik-led government, with its small Red Guard, was forced to rely on Armenian troops led by Dashnak officers {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  14. ^ Cronin, Stephanie (2004). Reformers and revolutionaries in modern Iran: new perspectives on the Iranian left. Psychology Press. p. 91. ISBN 0-415-33128-5. After the 'March Days', the Bolsheviks finally came to power and established their famous Baku Commune in April 1918 {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
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  57. ^ (Swietochowski 2004, pp. 118)
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  63. ^ (Kazemzadeh 1950, pp. 75)
  64. ^ "J3784-2011: Memorializing Governor Andrew M. Cuomo to proclaim Saturday, March 31, 2012 as Azerbaijani Remembrance Day in the State of New York". The New York State Senate. 27 March 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
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Bibliography