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|image=[[Image:Gfdfgd.jpg|285px]]<br>'''Karachay patriarchs in the 19th century'''
|image=[[Image:Gfdfgd.jpg|285px]]<br>'''Karachay patriarchs in the 19th century'''
|poptime= 300,000 (est.)
|poptime= 300,000 (est.)
|popplace= [[Russia]], [[Kazakhstan]], [[Turkey]], [[United States|America]], [[Syria]]
|popplace= [[Russia]], [[Kazakhstan]], [[Turkey]], [[USA]], [[Syria]]
|rels=[[Sunni Islam]]
|rels=[[Sunni Islam]]
|langs=[[Karachay-Balkar language|Karachay]]
|langs=[[Karachay-Balkar language|Karachay]]

Revision as of 12:01, 22 June 2007

Karachays

Karachay patriarchs in the 19th century
Regions with significant populations
Russia, Kazakhstan, Turkey, USA, Syria
Languages
Karachay
Religion
Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Other Turkic peoples, Kipchaks

The Karachays (Къарачайлыла, Qaraçaylıla) are a Turkic people of the Ciscaucasus, mostly situated in the Russian Karachay-Cherkess Republic. They refer to themselves as Alans (аланла, alanla).

History

The Karachays are one of the few direct descendants of the Alans.[1] The state of 'Alania' established in the Middle Ages had its capital in Maghas, which some authors locate in the mountains currently inhabited by the Karachay (others place it in modern Ingushetia or North Ossetia). In the 14th century, Alania was destroyed by Timur and the decimated population dispersed in the mountains. Timur's intervention to the North Caucasus introduced the local nations to Islam.

In 1828, the Russian army broke into the Karachay's territory and, after the series of battles with numerically insignificant military forces of mountain men, formally annexed the Karachay territories. In 1831 - 1860, Karachays joined the bloody anti-Russian struggles carried out by Caucasian peoples. In 1861 - 1880, to escape repression by the Russian army, large numbers of Karachays migrated to Turkey. Between Jan 1, 1921 - Dec 12, 1930 (early Soviet period), Bolshevik authorities quelled resistance to Soviet rule in Karachay region and other territories of the Caucasus. In 1942, the invading German army occupied the Karachay region.

File:Mingi tay.jpg
Elbrus - the glory of nation, photo by M. Chagarov, Feb. 2005

In November 1943, the Karachay people were forcibly resettled to the desert areas of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. The population of the nation at that time was nearly 80,000 people, primarily children, women and old men. Most of the male population were fighting with Nazis on the fronts of the World War II. With mass starvation, cholera, typhoid fever and other diseases, approximately 35% of the population died in 2 years (mainly the children). Out of 28,000 children, 22,000 died (approx. 78%)[2] Nowadays old men say: "That time in the Middle Asia was terrible for Karachay people: hunger, expulsion, and military violence; and Karachays preferred to die than to ask alms of others or blemish his or her honour or honour of the clan".

After 14 years, during the Khrushchev era in 1957, the chance to return to their historical lands was given to Karachay people . The first group of people returned on May 3, 1957

Karachays now celebrate this day and consider it their Revival Day.

Geography

The Karachay nation, as well as its brother nation, the Balkars, took the valleys and foothills of the Central Caucasus in the water gaps of the Kuban, Zelenchuk, Malka, Baksan, Cherek and others.

File:Dfgdfgdf.jpg
Dombai, photo by I. Bogatyryov, Feb. 2004

The Karachays and Balkars are very proud of the symbol of the nations, Mount Elbrus, the highest double-headed mountain in Europe with an altitude 5,642 meters.

Locations with dominant Karachay populations: Uchkulan, Huzruk, Kart Dzhurt, Arhyz, Dombai, Teberda, Karachaevsk, Ust-Dzheguta, Uchkeken, Novaya Dzheguta, Staraya Dzheguta, Kuzul Kala, Eltarkach.

Language and religion

The Karachay dialect of Karachay-Balkar language is of the Northwestern branch of Turkic languages. The Karachay are predominantly Sunni Muslim. They often fuse pre-Islamic pagan traditions with those of Islam.

Diaspora

Czarist Russian annexation of the Karachay nation led to mass migration to Turkey in the early 20th century. Karachays were also displaced en masse to the then Soviet controlled Central Asian states of Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan after Stalin's relocation campaign in 1944. Since the Khrushchev era in the Soviet Union, many Karachays have been repatriated to their homeland from Central Asia. Karachays residing in Turkey have also migrated to numerous Western countries in search of economic opportunity. Today, there are sizable Karachay communities in Turkey (centered around Eskisehir), Uzbekistan, America (centered around Paterson, New Jersey), and Germany.

Character of the nation

The isolated lifestyle among the Caucasus Mountains was one of the reasons of the establishment of the Karachay's unique character. Karachay people live in communities that are divided into clans and families: Uidegi – Ataul - Tukum – Tiire.

Prominent tukums include: Aci, Bici, Batcha (Batca), Baychora, Bayrimuk (Bayramuk) Bostan, Catto, Hubey (Hubi), Karabash, Laypan, Lepshok, Ozden, Silpagar, Teke, Toturkul,

and many others. There are roughly 32 Karachay tukums. A tukum is basically a family's clan-based lineage.

Karachay people are very independent in their behavior and adherence to their freedom. They have strong historically developed traditions and customs which regulate their lives: the wedding, the funeral, the pronouncement of family decisions, etc. They will never offend a guest and harbor a distinct attitude towards woman. An offense made towards a Karachay man's parents is fatal for the offender. Cowardice is the most serious shame for the male. The blood feud takes place to this very day.

Quotations

File:Karachay national dance.jpg
Karachay national dance

The Karachay is a neutral nation, which lives at the root of Elbrus, and excelling by its loyalty, goodliness and bravery”'.
Leo Tolstoy, Russian novelist and philosopher,
Omnibus Edition (anniversary edition),
Moscow, Volume 46, page 184.

See also


References

  1. ^ HISTORY OF KARACHAY-BALKAR PEOPLE: From the ancient times to joining Russia, by Ismail M. Miziyev, Nalchik: Mingi-Tau Publishing, 1994. Translation from Russian and footnotes by P. B. Ivanov - Moscow, 1997.
  2. ^ Genocide in Karachay by Hamit Botas.