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Citizenship, National Identity, and Nation-Building in Azerbaijan: Between the Legacy of the Past and the Spirit of Independence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2021

Ayça Ergun*
Affiliation:
Middle East Technical University, Üniversiteler Mahallesi, Ankara, Turkey
*
*Corresponding author. Email: ayer@metu.edu.tr
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Abstract

The aim of this article is to shed light on the process of nation-building and the formation of national identity in post-Soviet Azerbaijan. The peculiarity of Azerbaijani nation-building is that the debates on how to build a nation and define national identity were nourished by two discourses: Azerbaijanism (Azerbaycançılıq) and Turkism (Tűrkçűlűk). The article focuses firstly on the discourses on national identity and nation-building in the pre-independence period while elaborating on the roots and premises of the nationalist independence movement. Secondly, it highlights the discourses of nation-building in the post-independence period while discussing the meanings attributed to national identity and nationhood. It shows how these two discourses shaped the existing identity formation in Azerbaijan with a particular emphasis on citizenship identity, marked by multiculturalism, hospitality, tolerance, and patriotism. Yet one can still categorize the country as having an incomplete nation-building process, due the violation of territorial integrity as a result of the Karabakh conflict.

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© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Association for the Study of Nationalities

Introduction

The study of the rise of nationalism in the Soviet Union and how national resurgence paved the way for its dissolution is the subject of a wide range of academic literature (Bremmer and Taras Reference Bremmer and Taras1997; Brubaker Reference Brubaker1996; Buttino Reference Buttino1993; Diuk and Karatnycky Reference Diuk and Karatnycky1993; Hajda and Beissinger Reference Hajda and Beissinger1990; Lapidus, Zaslavsky, and Goldman Reference Lapidus, Zaslavsky and Goldman1992; Smith et al. Reference Smith, Law, Wilson, Bohr and Allworth1998; Tishkov Reference Tishkov1997). The process was generally explained by the legacy of the Soviet Union, the emergence of nationalizing elites and their rediscovery of cultural, social, political, and national origins, and by the ways in which the nationalist-independence movements paved the way for the formation of independent states. The question of how far national resurgence was the natural consequence of glasnost and perestroika was one point of inquiry. Some authors argued that it was the result of the suppression of the national and religious identities that were kept under control by Soviet ideology in creating Soviet citizens, whereas others authors argued that it was the Soviet policy toward the titular nationalities that defined the current boundaries of identity formation (Brubaker Reference Brubaker1996; Suny Reference Suny1990; Saroyan Reference Saroyan1989). Zaslavsky stated that the definition of ethnicity on the basis of predefined “ethnoterritorial units” created institutionalization “on the individual level through the introduction of a comprehensive internal passport which immutably fixed the ethnic affiliation of every Soviet citizen” (Reference Zaslavsky1992, 99). Instead of eliminating national affiliations, Soviet nationality policy unconsciously created and consolidated ethnicity and the “growing cohesion among the major nationalities” (Suny Reference Suny1990, 6). It was this policy which provided the “reconstruction of [an] ethnic identity that embraces the nation as a whole” (Saroyan Reference Saroyan1989, 220). The project of nation-building in the post-Soviet era then is marked by the remembrance of history, the formation of national identity on the basis of ethnicity and religion, and following the construction of nationhood, redefinition and reinterpretation of national identities.

This article sheds light on the nature of the process of nation-building and the formation of national and citizenship identities in post-Soviet Azerbaijan. It problematizes two main discourses, Azerbaijanism and Turkism, which offer different yet complementary notions of national identities. While doing this, it provides an analysis on how they were interpreted by the political and intellectual elite in order to show how they are incorporated and articulated to the process of nation-building. The first part primarily covers the pre-independence period while elaborating on the roots and premises of the nationalist independence movement in Azerbaijan, in order to provide a historical background to understand different conceptualizations of national identity in the post-Soviet period. It illustrates how the independence movement, together with collective action, shaped the relationship between nation-building, state-building, and democratization. The second section focuses on the discourses of nation-building in the post-independence period. In this part, the meanings attributed to nationhood and national identity will be discussed with reference to Ebulfez Elchibey’s, Heydar Aliyev’s, and Ilham Aliyev’s governments. In the third part, I focus on how external actors, namely, Iran, the Russian Federation, and Turkey, inform the perceptions of national identity in order to show to what extent ethnic, linguistic, and religious ties played a role. Finally, I discuss the role of the Karabakh conflict due to its significance for both Azerbaijanism and Turkism, since it constitutes the main challenge in the process of nation-building.

Early and recent works on national identity, nationalism, and nation-building in Azerbaijan lucidly provide an analysis of the sources of national identity formation in Azerbaijan from a historical perspective (Altstadt Reference Altstadt1988, Reference Altstadt1992, Reference Altstadt2017; Swietochowski Reference Swietochowski and Starr1994a, Reference Swietochowski1995, Reference Swietochowski1999; Yılmaz Reference Yılmaz2013; Hatcher Reference Hatcher2008). Both Altstadt and Swietochowski identified the Turkish, Persian, and Russian influences in shaping the meanings attributed to national identity, focusing on Russian colonial rule, the first republic period between 1918 and 1920, Soviet rule, and the pre-independence and early independence periods. More recent works identified different aspects of national identity formation and nation-building, focusing on the construction of Azerbaijani identity (Cornell Reference Cornell2011; Ismayilov Reference Ismayilov2012; Siroky and Mahmudlu Reference Siroky and Mahmudlu2016; Mahmudlu Reference Mahmudlu, Mammadli, Braux and Mahmudlu2017); issues related to the citizenship (Tabachnick 2019); the relationship between national identity and religion (Cornell, Karaveli, and Agajanov Reference Cornell, Karaveli and Agajanov2016; Ergun and Çitak Reference Ergun and Çitak2020; Valiyev Reference Valiyev2005); gender and identity (Heyat Reference Heyat2006; Tohidi Reference Tohidi1997); how political parties engage in nationalism as an ideology (Altstadt Reference Altstadt2017; Guliyev Reference Guliyev2019; Sultanova Reference Sultanova2014); and the impact of the Karabakh conflict (Broers Reference Broers2019; De Waal Reference De Waal2013; Zürcher Reference Zürcher2007; Garagozov Reference Garagozov2012; Uzer Reference Uzer2012). The peculiarity of Azerbaijani nation-building is that the debates on how to build a nation and define national identity had been nourished by two discourses: Azerbaijanism (Azerbaycançılıq) and Turkism (Tűrkçűlűk). Most, if not all, analyses present them as discourses of two different political groups, that is, government and opposition, representing alternatives to each other. This article argues for the complementarity of these two discourses, analyzing their interrelationship and how this interrelationship and complementarity influence the perceptions of national identity in Azerbaijan.

In the post-Soviet period, the Popular Front of Azerbaijan (PFA), under the leadership of Ebulfez Elchibey, propagated for Turkism, whereas Heydar Aliyev’s government was in favor of Azerbaijanism. In 1988, the eve of the dissolution of the former Soviet Union, the PFA was established. A group of nationalist intellectuals transformed a discussion group to a mass movement asking for independence. Nationalist ideology together with social mobilization and collective action created a sense of awareness of ethnic origins and national consciousness and redefined the bonds of solidarity. It was not a nationalist ideology that forced people to participate in demonstrations, rallies, and meetings; rather, it was within the movement, through collective action, that the whole issue of national identity was reformulated and the idea of belonging to a nation emerged beyond the established boundaries of clan, family, and region. The Popular Front Government (PFG), which came to power in 1992, articulated this nationalist discourse framed with the idea of Turkism and emphasized the Turkish origins of the Azerbaijani nation underlying pre-Soviet ethnic and cultural heritage. After Heydar Aliyev’s coming to power in 1993, emphasis in nation-building shifted to Azerbaijanism, an ideology thought to ease ethnic tensions within the country and an interpretation of identity that had its roots in the Soviet period, which facilitated its internalization. Ilham Aliyev’s period is marked by the consolidation of Azerbaijani citizenship identity. Since 2003 the consolidated notion of Azerbaijanism provided a basis for a civic understanding of Azerbaijanism and inclusionary citizenship identity. Yet, awareness of the Turkish roots has also increased compared to the early years of independence. The popularity of the Turkish origins does not at all challenge Azerbaijani identity. It rather remains complementary and creates a peaceful coexistence. In this existing interpretation the idea of independence is highly valued; building up a new state became a source of pride; Turkish roots are underlined, and a new understanding of citizenship has been updated and advertised. The ethnic roots are not promoted, yet are contained at very core of the Azerbaijani citizenship identity. This idea of Azerbaijani citizenship predominantly refers to multiculturalism, tolerance, and secularism, and these are promoted at the international milieus. All have a very strong background in Azerbaijani society both in pre-Soviet and Soviet times. They are historically embraced and promoted by the political and intellectual elite of Azerbaijan.

As of 2020, Azerbaijani identity embraces the attributes of Azerbaijanism and Turkism. Both ideologies, which were represented by differing political camps, are complementary rather than contradicting. The emphasis on multiculturalism and tolerance has been particularly incorporated by the ruling elite. Early interpretation was a mere repetition and rearticulation of identity à la the Soviet Union, emphasizing peaceful coexistence of the majority and minorities, whereas in its current interpretation, a new form of patriotism has been integrated. In this new interpretation the issue of national identity is not fully referring to the ethnic identity but rather to being proud of state existence, consolidation of sovereignty, remembrance of the early independent-state tradition, and the heritage of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (ADR). Additionally, the visibility of Azerbaijan as a country and Azerbaijaniness, with all its social and cultural attributes, have become an integral part of the internationalization of the country’s image. Hosting international events such as the Eurovision Song Contest, the European Games, Formula One, and Islamic Olympic Games can be seen as part of new national branding, but they can also be interpreted as examples of this new understanding and practice.

The article is based on data collected through 125 in-depth interviews. The fieldwork was conducted in Azerbaijan during November–December 1996; August 1998; April–July 2000; October–November 2002; June 2004; June–July 2014; February 2015; November–December 2016; April 2017; and September 2019. Respondents include politicians, members of parliament (from 1995 to 2015), representatives of civil society organizations, journalists, experts, and scholars. They either represent or support different political parties; however, there is also a significant number of respondents who do not associate themselves either with the government or the opposition. Thus, the analysis reflects on the views of representatives of different political spectrums. The expert interviews were conducted with scholars who work and write on issues related to national identity in Azerbaijan. The respondents were asked questions related to perceptions of national identity, attributes of nation- and state-building, interpretations of Azerbaijaniness and Turkishness, and problems in or challenges of the consolidation of national identity.

From Freedom Square to the Popular Front of Azerbaijan: The Rise of a Nation

The years preceding and succeeding independence in the South Caucasus were turbulent. They were marked not only by an attempt to restore cultural, political, and economic sovereignty but also by interethnic conflicts and the wars between countries, such as the case of Nagorno-Karabakh. The independence movements and mass mobilization were handled by the newly formed nationalist counter-elite that constituted an alternative to the existing power structure, that of the Communist Party. The road to independence was marked by the establishment of movements, popular fronts, and committees whose initiatives led to declarations of sovereignty and then of independence.

Nationalism in post-Soviet Azerbaijan evolved in three phases, serving first as a tool for defense, secondly as a tool for state-building, and finally as a tool for democratization. Karabakh problem constituted a major stimulus for the emergence of the nationalist independence movement. The Azerbaijani nationalist movement emerged via the definition of external enemies, that is, Armenians and Russians, which simultaneously paved the way for the nationalist upheavals as a defense movement.

The defeat in the war, the loss of territory, and the will to regain it permeated the whole discourse of national ideology and became the main motive of the independence movement. In this defense phase, the first component of the independence movement was the expression of ethnic identity as the main signifier of the formation of a national identity, the assertion of which was forbidden in the Soviet period. It was realized under the slogans of “being proud of history” and “self-awareness,” by glorifying national cultures and history, and by mystifying national heroes and glories. One of the representatives of the PFA elite commented, “What makes us nationalists? We wanted to see our country independent. We emphasized the fact that we are a part of the Turkish nation, and we struggled not to forget national identity. We fought for our national identity and national culture. That is why we are nationalists.”Footnote 1 The idea of nationalism in this phase can be basically characterized by loving the nation, preserving the ethnic and cultural values, the establishment of statehood, the rediscovery of ethnic, cultural and social origins and the improvement of the national heritage.Footnote 2

The second component of the movement and formation of the PFA was the rediscovery of the nation on the basis of a redefinition and reconceptualization of national identity. The first sign of a revival of national identity was the Freedom Square Movement (Meydan Harekatı), which occurred as a result of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict challenging territorial integrity. In February 1988 the Armenians of the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO) asked for the annexation of the oblast to the Armenian SSR in accordance with the principles of self-determination. On February 12, 1988, the first mass meeting at Xankendi, the capital of the NKAO (Stepanakert in Armenian) took place. On February 21, the people’s deputies asked for the unification of the Nagorno-Karabakh with the Armenian SSR and requested the agreement of the Supreme Soviets of Azerbaijan and Armenia. The demands were followed by meetings in Erevan and Stepanakert. As a result, in the small industrial town of Azerbaijan, Sumgait, near Baku, clashes between the two ethnic groups took place on February 28, 1988, during which 32 Armenians and 26 Azerbaijanis were killed. The Sumgait event was interpreted as a pogrom (Abrahamian Reference Abrahamian and Chorbajian2001, 130; Chorbajian Reference Chorbajian2000, 2) or massacre (Papazian Reference Papazian and Chorbajian2001, 84) by the Armenians and was used as a means of justification for their demands (Balayev and Mirze Reference Balayev and Mirze2000). For Azerbaijanis, on the other hand, the event was the result of agitation and provocation of both Armenians and Russians during which the local authorities consciously did not take the necessary steps in order to prevent the conflict (Balayev and Mirze Reference Balayev and Mirze2000, 18).

On May 18, 1988, the first meeting in Azerbaijan took place protesting the indecisiveness of the local Communist Party and asking for the territorial integrity of the country (Balayev and Mirze Reference Balayev and Mirze2000, 12). The first secretary, Kamuran Bagirov, was replaced by a new Moscow appointee, Abdurrahman Vezirov. Following the replacement, the Armenian Supreme Soviet passed a resolution asking for the transfer of the NKAO (Altstadt Reference Altstadt1992, 197). The Azerbaijani Supreme Soviet considered this as unacceptable and asked for respect for the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan (Balayev and Mirze Reference Balayev and Mirze2000, 18). On November 12, 1988, the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet decided to retain the NKAO in Azerbaijan (Altstadt Reference Altstadt1992, 199). This was followed by the first organized mass meeting from which the movement would grow. It took place in the main square of Baku, named Lenin Square, which would soon be called Freedom Square.

Between the November 17 and December 5, 1988, first hundreds then thousands of people gathered at Freedom Square for days and nights to protest against the Armenian demands and the reluctance to act by the Communist Party of Azerbaijan (Tahirzade Reference Tahirzade1997). It is also argued that this was a reaction against “growing social problems and injustice” (Balayev and Mirze Reference Balayev and Mirze2000, 14). On December 5, 1988, the eighteen days’ meeting was split up by the special security forces. A state of emergency was implemented. The commencement date of these meetings, November 17, is now celebrated as a national day called the National Resurgence, after the dissolution, and has acquired symbolic importance.

The Meydan, which was the first sign of the formation of political-organizational activity, has had historical significance for the process of political transformation and democratization. Moreover, the movement, characterized as “a broad based, multi-issue” one (Altstadt Reference Altstadt1992, 200) paved the way to the formation of a collective identity, which was defined in national terms, even though the national referred to a vague conception of identity in the sense that the symbols of the national were unknown. A historian who actively took part in the meetings said,

There were many flags at the meetings. The green flag, the Turkish flag, the Azerbaijani SSR flag… We thought that we needed our real flag.Footnote 3 Nobody knew what it looked like. I remembered that I saw it in the Handbook of Azerbaijan, in an archive when I was a graduate student in Moscow. I remembered the colors, red, green, and blue, but not the order. But nobody really knew the order or the shape of the star. We went to the shop, we bought the tissues and a lady made it in one night. The day after that was the first time that the flag of Azerbaijan was raised in the Meydan.Footnote 4

In this respect, the first revival of national memories and the resurrection of national symbols took place at the Meydan. Meydan was the milieu that constituted an opportunity structure for national identity to emerge and be expressed. The Karabakh conflict was the main stimulus for the remembrance of not only Turkish origins but also revealing of the historical signifiers of a once built-up nation and state that was the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic of the early 20th century (1918–1920). The views of the ADR’s intellectual and political elite provided a source of inspiration for the PFA not only in terms of ideological tenets but also as encouragement. They considered the ADR’s experience as a source of pride (Ergun and Çitak Reference Ergun and Çitak2020), providing them with the ability and power to rebuild yet another republic. One of the former members of the PFA and a high-ranked official argued, “At Meydan, we felt like ‘We did it once, we can do it again.’ ”Footnote 5 The idea of Turkism constituted the core of the ADR’s elite’s vision on national identity (Lemercier-Quelquejay Reference Lemercier-Quelquejay1984; Altstadt Reference Altstadt1986; Swietochowski Reference Swietochowski1995). In his work entitled Asrımızın Siyavuş’u, Mehmed Emin Resulzade discusses the different impacts on the Azerbaijani identity, including Iranian, Turkish, Russian, Muslim, and Christian, concluding that “Azerbaijanis are Turks” (Reference Resulzade1989, 67). One of the participants of the movement stated that it was by then he felt like a “real citizen in his own state for the first time in his life.”Footnote 6 With popular support and with revealed issues of the Freedom Square Movement, from 1989 onward the PFA prepared the ideological and conceptual base of the nation-building agenda.

The Popular Front of Azerbaijan and Its Nation-Building Discourse

The PFA’s nation-building agenda was set on the basis of three important and complementary perceptions about nationhood that affected the ways in which discourses on national identity were formed. These perceptions referred (1) to nationhood in the past; (2) to nationhood within the territory; and (3) to nationhood beyond the boundaries. Here, nationhood in the past refers to the revelation of history, remembrance of cultural, ethnic, and religious origins and their assertions. Nationhood within the territory means protection of the land, inviolability of the frontiers, and preservation of territorial integrity. Nationhood beyond the boundaries has two dimensions. The first dimension foresees collaboration with and extension of the relationships with other Turkic peoples of the Soviet Union, mainly in Central Asia due to the linguistic, ethnic, cultural, and religious affinities. The second dimension is related to Azerbaijanis living outside the current boundaries, primarily those living in Iran. With reference to these perceptions, four main issues were addressed in the PFA’s programs: Soviet policies toward nationalities; relations with other Turkic peoples within the USSR; the relationship between Azerbaijani people and national ethnic minorities; and the restoration of the first democratic republic’s heritage.

In terms of nationhood in the past, the first declaration of the PFA emphasized the right to self-determination of nationalities, and it was argued that the “current USSR rule does not create favorable legal and socioeconomic conditions in the USSR to determine freely the right of self-determination of nationalities” (Nerimanoglu Reference Nerimanoglu1992, 85). As for the reference to the national revival and rediscovery of past origins (Akiner Reference Akiner1997), it stated that “the symbols of the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic (three color flag, national anthem, symbol) should be recognized as the national symbols of the republic” (Nerimanoglu Reference Nerimanoglu1992, 89–90). The revitalization of national memory plays a significant role in state-building as well. Rediscovery of the previous state tradition rather than creation or invention made the elite feel more secure and allowed them to think that they already had a solid basis for future statehood. In this respect, the pre-Soviet experience would not constitute a basis for new state-building but served as an “invention of tradition” (Hobsbawm Reference Hobsbawm1983) in the early years of independence and as a source of inspiration and pride in its later stage with Azerbaijan’s being the “first secular parliamentary democracy in the Muslim world.”Footnote 7

Nationhood within the territory was defined in terms of majority and minority relations. The PFA’s program emphasized “the termination of the autonomous status of Nagorno-Karabakh and the full implementation of the sovereign rights of Azerbaijan over the territory” (Nerimanoglu Reference Nerimanoglu1992, 91). In terms of relations with other nationalities, it noted, “The relationship between the people of Azerbaijan and other minorities, who are less numerous, should be established in accordance to both sides’ rights and will” (98). The program also entailed the right of preservation and development of national cultures and expressed its will for greater cultural autonomy. It was stated that “the PFA owes the creation of conditions which favor the protection and empowerment of culture, language, and national traditions of Russians, Jews, Talyshs, Armenians, Georgians, Kurds, Lezgins, and other national minorities in the Azerbaijan’s SSR” (110). Such conception of majority-minority relations constituted the basis of the nationalists’ discourse on Azerbaijanism. Although Elcibey’s government has been blamed of being Panturkist and for using discriminatory and exclusionary discourse, it later became apparent that the newly emerging elite would like to restore the right of the majority to name its identity without necessarily discriminating against the national minorities. The presidential decree accepted in 1992, which is still in force, is an example of this attitude.

In terms of nationhood beyond the territory, the PFA “invites all Turkic peoples of the USSR to resist and to collaborate,” while noting that all Turkic peoples “lost their traditions of state administration, … were denied the experience of statehood” (92), “oppressed by exiles, deportations and killings … were regarded as a cheap labor force, source of raw materials and market” (94–95). It gave special importance to the improvement of relationships with the Azerbaijanis living in Iran, while emphasizing the development of relationships respectful to the territorial integrity of the USSR and Iran and to the principles of “inviolability of the borders of the Azerbaijan SSR and Iran” (101). In its first program, Azerbaijan SSR’s political, cultural, and economic sovereignty would entail remaining within the USSR (102), whereas in 1991 the idea of independence became obvious. Yet, the simultaneous attempt for the democratization of society and the redefinition of nationhood hindered the implementation of the suggested aims. Elchibey noted, “Our struggle is a struggle of democracy and national unity. The movement for democracy overlaps with the national independence movement. That is why we are suffering now, falling to left and then to right” (Reference Elchibey1992, 81–82). In this sense, the PFA as a movement created a framework for post-Soviet transformation where the issues of how to be a democratic country, how to construct the state, and how to form a nation intertwined, not necessarily contradicting each other. It can be argued that particularly after Ilham Aliyev’s coming to power the close association between nationalism and democracy lost its values. The oppositional activity concentrated more on the further democratization rather than discussing the premises of the national identity. Due to apparent decline of the opposition in the political domain, nationalism is largely associated with so-called defeated democrats. Nationalism lost its priority status within the discourse, and language of political struggle and appeals for democratization became the major priority, particularly after death of Ebulfez Elchibey in 2000. In other words, nationalism as a movement and Turkism as a discourse lost their owners in the political domain. Yet the later years of political transformation shows that Turkishness was incorporated into the definition of national identity and actually became an integral part of the citizenship identity. In the PFA years Turkishness was to be remembered and reminded to those who lost the sense of their ethnic origins in the Soviet period. The experience of 29 years of independent statehood not only reestablished but also consolidated Azerbaijani citizenship identity. Within this Azerbaijani citizenship identity, there is now a more conscious and increased awareness on the Turkish roots and a peaceful coexistence rather than a tension.

Post-independence Nationalism as a Tool for State-Building and Democratization

In the early post-Soviet period, the nation-building process in Azerbaijan has been nourished by two discourses represented by government and opposition: Azerbaijanism and Turkism. Debate over national identity provided an arena of elite contestation on state-building and nation-building. These two discourses are not necessarily contradictory and in some sense are complementary, but their emphases on how and on which basis to build a nation are quite different. The Popular Front Government’s discourse, under the presidency of Elchibey, centered on the rediscovery of Turkish identity; Aliyev’s regime took for granted the perception under the Soviet rule and reconsolidated the term Azerbaijani as the name of the national identity. Azerbaijani as the name of identity did not encounter much resistance and was internalized. However, it is noteworthy to look at the contents of both discourses in order to understand the roots of contemporary perceptions and conceptualizations of national identity. As of 2020 the citizenship is more associated with the idea of independent statehood, glorifying the value of independence, and the territorial integrity of the country.Footnote 8 The respondents whom I interviewed between 1996 and 1998 mainly conceptualized the national identity with reference to the discourses of Azerbaijanism and Turkism. Although these two discourses were represented by two opposing political groups, proponents of Turkish identity did not reject the Azerbaijani identity as citizenship identity and proponents of Azerbaijanism did not undermine or reject the Turkish origins. Recent interviews conducted between 2017 and 2019 with a younger generation of intellectual elites showed that the perceptions about national identity underline “the Azerbaijani identity with Turkish origins” with a strong and frequent statements including “being proud of living in an independent country,” “Azerbaijan determines its own faith and path,” “Azerbaijan alone can determine its own priorities,” and “We worked hard to consolidate our independence. This is our major security concern.”Footnote 9 Through recognition of Turkish origins, inserted Turkishness is replaced by a well-informed sense of national identity that resulted in the formation of peaceful coexistence of Azerbaijanism and Turkism.

Nationalism (with its emphasis on Turkism) served as a tool for state-building and for creating a state ideology under the PFG. With Aliyev’s coming to power in 1993, the emphasis was shifted to Azerbaijanism and to stability in order to protect statehood. Not only is the changing emphasis remarkable. With the overthrow of the PFG in 1993, the nationalist discourse of the opposition became an integral part of the democratization agenda rather than the nation-building and state-building agendas. “Being nationalist” and “being democratic” became synonymous and were used interchangeably. In other words, the opposition embodied both being a nationalist and being a democrat in its struggle against the regime in the early years of independence.

The Popular Front Government and Its Nation-Building Agenda

The rule of the PFG is crucial in terms of nation-building and state-building. Since the first mission (i.e., the achievement of independence) was completed, nationalism as a defense movement converted into nationalism as a tool for state-building. The issue of national identity that was the stimulus of the demand for independence and democracy became a tool for state-building. The agenda of state-building was proclaimed to be based on democracy, secularism, and the rule of law. The Front’s agenda for post-Soviet political transformation denounced all that was Soviet in an attempt to “correct the errors of the past” (Goltz Reference Goltz1998, 256). The alphabet was changed from Cyrillic to Latin, and the government encouraged the use of the Latin alphabet and the Azerbaijani language in all state affairs. The new currency manat, considered a main marker of independent statehood by President Elchibey, was introduced instead of the ruble (Elchibey Reference Elchibey1998, 18). It became fashionable to change the family name from Russian names to Azerbaijani ones. While changing the names, they drop the Russian patronymic ov or ova (son of) from the family name in favor of the Azerbaijani equivalents, oglu, zade, or li, or just dropped the patronymic altogether (Goltz Reference Goltz1998, 256).

The nation-building agenda of the PFG was a substantive change for national identity formation and state-building. Its significance was visible in the naming of the national identity and the language. The PFG conceptualized nationhood in terms of majority and minority relations, which would consequently lead to a contested debate because such a distinction could create disturbances between the majority and national minorities and lead to the possible practices of discrimination. Apparently strong emphasis on the Turkish dimension of national identity provoked some separatist movements, such as the Lezgins and Talyshs in 1993 and 1994.

The national ideology was defined on the basis of Turkism, modernization, and Islam (Tahirzade Reference Tahirzade1999, 140).Footnote 10 Elchibey emphasized the fact that this Turkism was not linked to the ideas of chauvinism as “it is the necessity of being conscious of one’s history, civilization, and himself a Turk” (150). It was this national ideology, which was representative of the majority of the people, namely, Turks that would eventually initiate the establishment of democratic statehood.Footnote 11 The presidential decree entitled “The Presidential Decree on the Official Language of the Republic of Azerbaijan,” adopted December 22, 1992, complemented this view. The decree states that “the official language of the Azerbaijan Republic is Turkish” (Azerbaycan 1992b ). The majority of the population was called Azerbaijani Turks or Turks. Thus, the Front restored the name of the people, which had changed in 1937 from Turks to Azerbaijanis.Footnote 12

In fact, the nationhood policy of the PFG defined two main identities within Azerbaijani citizenship: the majority and the minorities. The same decree says, “All the citizens of the Republic of Azerbaijan are guaranteed the freedom of choosing their educational language. The national ethnic minorities living in Azerbaijan are entitled to have separate classes in their native language in preschooling, primary and secondary schools” (Azerbaycan 1992b, art. 3). In order to implement this law, the PFG began to publish new textbooks in Azerbaijani Turkish and in the minority languages (Tahirzade Reference Tahirzade1999, 49). Protection of the rights of ethnic and religious minorities was also one of the main concerns of the PFG. Another presidential decree, entitled “The Presidential Decree on the Protection of the Rights and Liberties of National Minorities, Less Populated and Ethnic Groups and State Assistance for the Development of their Language and Civilisation” was adopted in 1992 on the status of ethnic and religious minorities (Azerbaycan 1992a). This was presented as the main proof of their nondiscriminating discourse. Elchibey argued, “How could we be intolerant and not respectful of the rights of the ethnic minorities living in Azerbaijan? After being subjects of the discriminatory policies of the Soviet power, we are the last ones who could violate their rights.”Footnote 13 The law ensures “the principle of equality for all citizens regardless of their nationality, ethnic origins and religion,” as well as “the protection and the development of the indigenous culture, language and religion of national minorities and ethnic groups” (Azerbaycan 1992b, art. 2). Additionally, funds were allocated from the state budget for cultural civilizational centers of ethnic minorities and religious minorities. After Aliyev’s coming to power in 1993, the PFG elite became the main opposition of the country and established a few political parties, namely, the Azerbaijan Popular Front Party, the Musavat Party, and the Azerbaijan Nationalist Independence Party. Their discourses on nationalism, national identity, and nation-building were overlapping to a great extent.

Heydar Aliyev’s Presidency and Its Nation-Building Agenda

The replacement of the PFG by Aliyev signified a shift in the nation-building agenda and introduced a new discourse on how to construct national identity. The conceptualization of the government understanding of national identity took its roots from the very terminology of the Soviet period. Azerbaijani people had acquired three different names (Tatars or Muslims, Turks, and Azerbaijanis) in the 20th century (Altstadt Reference Altstadt1992 ). Aliyev’s government of Azerbaijan preferred the use of Azerbaijani for both the language and citizenship. It has taken cautious measures against the intensive emphasis on Turkishness of the PFG’s discourse and some separatist movements, such as the Lezgins and Talyshs in 1993 and 1994.

The Azerbaijani Constitution, adopted in 1995, calls the people of Azerbaijan Azerbaijanis (Azerbaycanlı) and their language the language of Azerbaijan (Azerbaycan dili) (Republic of Azer. Const. art. 21). Thus, Azerbaijani became the official name for the national identity, citizenship, and language. The main argument behind this was that the term covers all the peoples living in Azerbaijan regardless of their ethnicity and left no room for disturbances among the ethnic minorities.Footnote 14 Aliyev’s regime then eased the possible tensions between ethnic groups while shifting the emphasis on Turkism of the PFG to Azerbaijanism. Tabachnik states that he “carefully crafted territorial nationalism policy of ‘Azerbaijanism’ on basing the nation of the territory of state” (Reference Tabachnik2019, 227). In this sense, Azerbaijanism was conceived as a civic rather than ethnically defined national identity. As Siroky and Mahmudlu state, “Aliyev sought to create -Azerbaijanism- —an overarching identity that includes all citizens, regardless of ethnicity or religion—as a response to the ethnic separatism of the early 1990s and the continuing threat of ethnic conflict” (Reference Siroky and Mahmudlu2016, 99).

Azerbaijanism was thought of as “a project for the unification of people” considering that “people living in the territory of Azerbaijan are Azerbaijanis.”Footnote 15 According to the ruling New Azerbaijan Party’s program, Azerbaijanism and patriotism are its main principles. It is stated that it considers “all Azerbaijani citizens living in the country and outside of it, who obey Azerbaijani State and its laws, irrespective of their language, ethnic, and social origins, as Azerbaijani people and considers Azerbaijan as the common, indivisible motherland and native country” and the party “binds defense of Azerbaijani people’s national and moral values, traditions, national moral mentality, language, and religion by a single Azerbaijani state” (New Azerbaijan Party 1999).

Representatives of the ruling party argued that the emphasis on Turkism would lead to separatist movements; therefore, “national ideology should be Azerbaijanism” as “Turks, Lezgins, Talyshs, Russians and even Armenians living in Azerbaijan are Azerbaijanis.”Footnote 16 Azerbaijanism was not only thought of as a basis for nationhood but also was a facilitating tool for the consolidation of statehood where stability was the main concern. In terms of majority-minorities relations, there was no conflict after 1994.Footnote 17 Although it is argued that LezginsFootnote 18 would be the “next candidates for autonomous-territorial status” (Swietochowski Reference Swietochowski1999, 421), the possible emergence of separatist movements was found less likely to occur by the interviewees who argued “they are already Azerbaijanified” in the sense that they all speak the Azerbaijani language, are well integrated in society, and agree with the naming of Azerbaijan.Footnote 19 Thus, the government discourse on nation-building did not make any distinction between the majority and minorities, unifying them under the name Azerbaijani. The inclusiveness implies that ethnic minorities are less likely to cause further problems for the consolidation of nation- and state-building, particularly in the early years of the post-independence period when the territorial integrity had been violated. Aliyev’s government undertook considerable steps to consolidate nationhood under the rubric of Azerbaijani after dealing with the upheavals by Lezgins and Talyshs. Especially in his last years in power, he also fostered the widespread usage of the native language and acquired important achievements in the protection and development of the language as a symbol of national identity.

The opposition to the Aliyev’s government was distinctive with its continuing emphasis on Turkism. For the opposition, the name of the language is Turkish (Tűrk Dili) and the national identity is Turkish (Türk). They did not object to the usage of Azerbaijani Turkish and Azerbaijani Turks (Azerbaycan Türkü). Thus, it is this Turkishness that constitutes the basis of the opposition’s discourse. The year of 1995 was critical in that respect and was marked by an ongoing debate on how to name the language and the national identity (Hacıyev Reference Hacıyev1992; Tahirzade Reference Swietochowski1995; Gamber Reference Gamber1996; Vahabzade Reference Vahabzade1996). In 1995 parliamentary elections and a referendum on the constitution were held. The government’s preference for Azerbaijani further demonstrated the opposition’s discourse.

After the official recognition of Azerbaijani as a name of the identity and the language, the Azerbaijan Popular Front Party declared that, “in December 1992, Milli Mejlis (parliament), considering the historical past, the memory of the oral and written language of its people, as well as taking into account numerous academic-historical facts and the principle of national statehood, passed a decree on the official language of Azerbaijan. With this decision historical justice was reconsolidated and the official language was named Turkish language, as it had been in the period of the National Democratic Republic of Azerbaijan.”Footnote 20 Similarly, the chair of the Musavat Party argued, “the name of our language has been Turkish throughout history. They [ethnic minorities] could not be jealous of the majority’s right to name its own language” (Gamber Reference Gamber1996, 7).

In the opposition agenda, nationalism was defined as “loving the nation, being ready to make sacrifice in the name of nation and being faithful to the nation’s ability to rule itself.” (Müsavat Partiyasının Proqramı ve Nizamnamesi 1997 , 4). In this nationhood project, Turkism was referred to as “national self-consciousness” and as “a basis of the multifaceted closeness and collaboration of the Turkic peoples and states” (5). The opposition rejects the usage of Azerbaijani to describe national identity, arguing that Azerbaijan is the name of territory where “Turks live” (Rustemxanlı Reference Rustemxanlı and İbrahimli1998, 64). One politically active linguist disagreed with his colleagues who preferred the term Azerbaijani, arguing, “All your enemies call you ‘Turks,’ and you are now saying that ‘No we are not’. How will you explain this injustice to your grandchildren? How will you look at their face when they will ask you who they really are?”Footnote 21 Here he drew attention to the fact that Azerbaijanis living in Iran call themselves as Turks and are called the same by Persians. Similarly, Armenians frequently call Azerbaijanis Turks (Abrahamian Reference Abrahamian and Chorbajian2001; Dragadze Reference Dragadze1989, 56; Laitin and Suny Reference Laitin and Suny1999, 147).

The opposition included Azerbaijanism in its nation-building agenda in a distinctive way. It captured this term not as a basis for defining national identity but as complementary to Turkism. Azerbaijanism was also considered to be related to the idea of citizenship rather than national identity. For the Musavat Party, it was defined as “[the] Azerbaijani patriotism loyal to independence, unitarism and unity and to the ideals of freedom and independence” (Müsavat Partiyasının Proqramı ve Nizamnamesi 1997 , 5), whereas Turkism refers to “the national self-consciousness” and was considered as “the basis of rapprochement and cooperation among Turkish peoples and states” (5). The ideology of the Party, Musavatçılıq was defined as “the Azerbaijani patriotism loyal to national civilization, internalizing international values tied with the ideals of freedom, republic, and stability” (5). The Azerbaijan Popular Front Party defined Azerbaijanism as “the moral, political and national unity deriving from people’s consciousness of the feeling of an Azerbaijani motherland and an Azerbaijani state. This is to feel and to understand that Azerbaijan is the only motherland, to recognize the Azerbaijani state as one’s own and to feel as a member of the Azerbaijani people” (Azerbaijan Popular Front Party Programme 1999, 3). The complementary nature of Azerbaijanism showed itself in the principles of national statehood in Azerbaijan, the territorial integrity of the country, the defense of country, and the protection of the rights of ethnic-national minorities. In their understanding, “Azerbaijanism completes Turkism with its idea of protecting of Azerbaijani national statehood, indivisibility of the state and the protection of national ethnic minorities” (Nasibzade Reference Nasibzade and İbrahimli1998, 6). Therefore, “Azerbaijanism consists of the idea of independence, unity, and totality, but it is not the national identity, only a part of it” (Ibrahimli Reference Ibrahimli and İbrahimli1998, 52).

In the opposition discourse the status of ethnic groups was seen as part of the citizenship agenda rather than the nation-building agenda. In this respect, both government and opposition have an understanding of civic nationalism for state-building. They do not exclude national minorities and openly declared that they would not be discriminated against on the basis of ethnicity or religion. They do not intend to create a homogenous nation and state but rather a state where there is a distinction between the majority and minority.

The opposition’s discourse on majority and minority relations is very significant. They argue that Azerbaijani Turks are the dominant majority, which encompasses the characteristics of a nation, while the rest are ethnic minorities. This view has two implications. On the one hand, it is in the national interest of the Azerbaijani Turks “to protect its statehood, and create its political, economic, and ideological basis” (Gezenferoglu Reference Gezenferoglu2000, 297). For the opposition it is the role of the majority (or those who represent the majority) to form the nation and define the ideology of the would-be nation while taking into account the status of the ethnic minorities living in the territory. Thus, they argue that it is still the majority’s right and duty to protect the rights of the ethnic and religious minorities living in a country with “a state policy which is determined by Turkic identity, Turkic character, and a Turkic mission. This policy has to create opportunities for other ethnic and religious civilizations to live under the roof of this state” (298–299).

To conclude, in the opposition’s agenda, “being nationalist” was used in the sense of loving the nation and the state, propagating the revival of the national memory, defining integrity and solidarity on the basis of national identity rather than on regional identity, and clientelistic networks or clan based politics. Although the opposition defines its nation-building agenda in accordance with the majority’s dominance, it is remarkable that they do not discriminate on the basis of the ethnic differences between majority and minorities. After the overthrow of the PFG, the project of nationhood of Aliyev’s government shifted its emphasis to Azerbaijanism in order to create so-called stability not only in state affairs and administration but also in nation-building. Stability was to be achieved with cohesiveness among all ethnic groups living in the territory.

Ilham Aliyev’s Presidency and Contemporary Interpretations of National and Citizenship Identities

Ilham Aliyev, who came to power in 2003, inherited the notion of national identity and fostered construction of citizenship identity. He also promoted the notion of Azerbaijaniness, yet a slight change in his term in the office is also remarkable. The notion of citizenship has been reconceptualized through the incorporation of multiculturalism and tolerance with a very strong emphasis on secularism. This discourse has been particularly promoted before and during the international events hosted in Baku (Valiyev Reference Valiyev, Makarychev and Yatsyk2016; Rojo-Labaien Reference Rojo-Labaien2018; Ismayilov Reference Ismayilov2012; Siroky and Mahmudlu Reference Siroky and Mahmudlu2016).

The above-mentioned conflicting views on naming national identity in the early years of independence do not occupy the intellectual and public debate in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijaniness is well consolidated both as citizenship and national identity acknowledging a strong ethnic component, that is the Turkish identity. It can be argued that the ethnic dimension reminded and incorporated by the PFA is now more consciously embraced, yet it does not override or underestimate Azerbaijaniness.

In the existing context, a very strong emphasis on the independent statehood is being made with reference to citizenship identity. The territorial integrity and the resolution of the Karabakh conflict are of utmost importance for the preservation of independent and consolidated statehood. Pre-Soviet experience of statehood has been highly valued, and the Azerbaijani government celebrated 100th Anniversary of the establishment of the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic and glorified the previous statehood experience. The discourse of modernization and secularism, which was essential to the ADR’s political and intellectual elite, has been celebrated, underlining as the main ideological sources of the current Azerbaijani identity. The Soviet experience of peaceful coexistence and cohabitation of ethnic and religious groups provided a basis for the promotion of multiculturalism and tolerance in Azerbaijan. This is not only a discourse on the acknowledgement of cultural diversity but also a very strong emphasis on the preservation and promotion of secularism.

Defining “Friend and Foe”: The Impact of Foreign Countries on the Perception of National Identity

In the post-Soviet period, the impact of the relations with Russia, Iran, and Turkey on nation-building was very significant. The conduct of foreign policy toward these states inspired the PFG’s agendas of state- and nation-building in many ways and constitute the main pillars of both Heydar and Ilham Aliyev’s governments. New state-building in the early years of independence also required a new foreign policy with strong emphasis on the definition of friends and foes. The PFG was characterized as pro-Turkey, pro-West, anti-Iran, and anti-Russia, whereas Heydar Aliyev conducted a more balanced policy toward the neighbors (Cornell Reference Cornell2011; Hunter Reference Hunter, Bremmer and Taras1997; Swietochowski Reference Swietochowski1999). The impact of the relations with Armenia, Russia, Iran, and Turkey on nation- and state-building was very significant. New state-building also required a new foreign policy. In this respect the agenda of state-building and the definition of friends and foes were also interrelated to nation-building.

Turkey has a special prestige in the country because of the cultural, ethnic, and linguistic similarities. The country is considered as the best ally and ultimate friend of Azerbaijan by both the government and the opposition. The fact that Turkey was the first country to recognize Azerbaijan’s independence, as well as her unconditional support for Azerbaijan on the Karabakh problem and the refusal of building diplomatic ties with Armenia, created very close ties of friendship and a strategic partnership. The motto of “one nation two states” frequently referred to by all presidents and politicians of both countries contributes to this extensively peculiar relationship, which also has a very strong basis in both Azerbaijani and Turkish public opinions.Footnote 22

Russia’s impact on nation-state building can be seen in the emphasis on the territorial integrity and on the protection of independence. The PFG considered Russia and Armenia as threats to the state’s independence and territorial integrity. Russia is considered as a main threat for the independence and security of statehood because it did not decline “its imperialistic ambition.”Footnote 23 It symbolizes the past, hegemony, and dominance, as well as the authoritarian system. One politician said, “Once Nerimanov said that Azerbaijan’s happiness is tied with its union with Russia. I argue the antithesis. Azerbaijan’s happiness depends on its purification from Russia.”Footnote 24 Additionally, Russia’s potential to provoke national ethnic minorities was expressed.Footnote 25 Besides the Karabakh problem, Armenian and Russian military alliance is considered as a threat to territorial integrity. Moreover, Armenia and Russia have an impact on nationhood within the territory, since they constitute Others of the Azerbaijani nation in the pre-independence period and its aftermath.

Iran, on the other hand, has some historical legacies in Azerbaijani culture (Hunter Reference Hunter, Bremmer and Taras1997; Swietochowski Reference Swietochowski and Starr1994a, Reference Swietochowski, Banuazizi and Weiner1994b). Both countries are Shi’a Muslims, and the declaration of independence might have led to an opening up of Iran to its religious brothers. However, the PFG declared its will to remain a secular democratic state, and the elite was secular minded (Swietochowski Reference Swietochowski1999, 423). The PFG also gave a particular emphasis to the development of relationships between Iranian (Southern) Azerbaijan and the Republic of Azerbaijan, propagating for the protection of the cultural rights of Azerbaijanis in Iran in its project of nationhood beyond the boundaries. The fact that the Azerbaijani territory was divided into two (one part remaining in Russia and the other in Iran by the Turkmancay Treaty signed in 1828) widely affected the nationalist inspirations of the intellectual elite of Azerbaijan in 1970s and 1980s (Nissman Reference Nissman1984; Swietochowski Reference Swietochowski1995). The division was referred to as “Azerbaijanis are divided between two lands” as a “result of historical injustice,” “misfortune of history,” and “the rivalry between the big powers.”Footnote 26 The idea of a Unified Azerbaijan (Butov Azerbaycan) was launched by Elchibey, aiming to unify both people and territory. However, the implication of living under different rules and (perhaps more importantly) under different cultures caused a real alienation among Azerbaijanis. When the interaction between two groups increased, different cultural, religious, and linguistic practices revealed variances. Iranian Azerbaijanis criticized those in the Azerbaijani SSR for being “Russified,” “losing their language,” and “forgetting their religion,” whereas the other side occasionally referred to them as “backward” and “fundamentalist.”Footnote 27

Heydar Aliyev’s government, however, took cautious measures against this policy, arguing that such ideas could harm the Azerbaijani-Iranian relationship and that the status of ethnic Azerbaijanis was an internal affair of Iran, and so he avoided intervening. One can argue that discourses of national identity and nation-building are also reflected in the foreign policy making of Azerbaijan and the impact of neighboring countries are also remarkable. One cannot ignore the role that common ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds, along with a shared historical and political heritage, play in defining friends and foes. Yet the political leaderships of the post-independence period made a conscious choice in accordance with their preferences in their discourses of national identity. This is constructing, promoting, and strengthening extremely good ties with Turkey; preserving distance with Iran; preventing its particularly religious influence when necessary; and conducting a cautious and balanced policy toward Russia bearing in mind its support to Armenia and its potential for intervention as in the cases of Georgia and Ukraine. Such choices in defining foreign policy priorities are also informed by the strong emphasis on the independence and consolidation of the statehood by the respondents.

The Main Challenge to Nation-Building in Post-Soviet Azerbaijan: The Karabakh Conflict

The discourses of national identity and nation-building have been informed by the political and cultural characteristics of the country and of the region. In the political transformation of Azerbaijan, the Karabakh conflict burdened the processes of democratization, nation-building, and state-building.

The Karabakh conflict has a decisive role in the process of nation-building. It permeated the redefinition of national identity by redefining others and fostered the national independence movement. It is also an integral part of state-building, since the territorial integrity of the country is violated. The Karabagh issue is also an integral part of the democratization process as both defeat and success in handling the issue was and is always at the center stage of opposition policies in its struggle against government. Initially a secessionist movement, the conflict became an interstate war that had a significant impact both on Armenian and Azerbaijani political transformations. The war resulted in an estimated 25,000 dead (Macfarlane and Minear Reference Macfarlane and Minear1997, 1), and the number of estimated casualties are 7,000–8,000 on the Armenian side and 20,000–22,000 on the Azerbaijani side (Panossian Reference Panossian2001).

The Karabakh problem has a considerable impact on both state-building and nation-building. In Armenia and Azerbaijan, the issue of Karabagh was the main impulse behind the formation of the independence movements. Armenians were content to be a part of the Soviet Union, considering it as a guarantee against “Turkish aggression” (Dudwick Reference Dudwick, Dawisha and Parrott1997, 77). However, they supported their compatriots in Azerbaijan when the latter asked for secession (78). The Karabakh Committee was initiated by the Armenians of the NKAO and became a unified movement with their compatriots in Armenia under the name of the Armenian National Movement (Smith Reference Smith, Merridale and Ward1991, 211). Around ideas of “psychological protection against the ‘Turkic threat,’ in part by identifying the Azerbaijanis indiscriminately and erroneously with the Turkish people” (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Law, Wilson, Bohr and Allworth1998, 50), the restoration of a “non-territorial nationalism” (Suny Reference Suny1990, 14), and the stimulation of the right of self-determination (Rutland Reference Rutland1994, 842), the Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians declared their sovereignty in spring 1990 and occupied approximately 20% of Azerbaijani territory by the autumn of 1993.

For the Azerbaijanis, it is considered as a historical territory of Azerbaijan where “they have been good hosts to their Armenian neighbor-guest” (Altstadt Reference Altstadt1988, 74). They regard Nagorno Karabakh as an integral part of their history and territory where Armenians unjustly occupy 20% of Azerbaijani territory, resulting in more than one million refugees and internally displaced people. These people have been living in drastically severe conditions for the last decades. Azerbaijan without Karabakh is unthinkable. Azerbaijanis consider the conflict as affecting their territorial integrity and challenging the inviolability of the frontiers.

In Azerbaijan, Karabakh’s significance is tied to all three processes of political transformation. First and foremost, the Karabakh conflict paved the way for the creation of Others, that is, Armenians and Russians. Second, it constituted the main incentive behind the national movement, enabling the creation of national identity. The loss of territory has lessened the nation’s and citizens’ faith in themselves. The defeat in Karabakh also provoked the psychology of defeat, since the Azerbaijanis felt threatened and unprotected by the unjust occupation of territory. It also decreased hopes to get the territory back due to the status quo achieved by the cease fire. This has led in a lessening of political activism through a national awakening that previously paved the way for independence.

Last, the conflict also has a significance for the process of state-building. Besides being the main stimulus of the independence movement, Karabakh is the sacred and untouchable signifier of territorial integrity, which is the basis for statehood, and it consolidates the national identity that included both Azerbaijanism and Turkism. As of 2020, both the Azerbaijani government and society strongly underline the fact that a surrender of any form is not acceptable and that the occupied territories should be freed through a peaceful resolution.

Conclusion

In the early years of the political transformation in Azerbaijan, debates on how to construct the nation took place in relation to state-building and democratization. It constituted one of the primary dichotomies between government and opposition and their projects for an independent and democratic statehood. The Karabakh conflict remains a major problem for the consolidation of democracy and state-building. Since the official constitutional recognition of Azerbaijani as the name of the identity and language, the intellectual and political debate on “who we really are” and “what the components of the nation are” became silent issues embedded in a new discourse of multiculturalism and tolerance, which are well accommodated. Yet both the nation-building project and process would only be completed by the return of the occupied territories. Previous experience of cohabitation with ethnic and religious minorities and a strong emphasis on multiculturalism and tolerance have the potential to contribute to the consolidation of state-building after territorial integrity is secured.

Acknowledgement

I would like to thank Meryem Orujlu, Farda Asadov, and Zana Çitak for their invaluable comments and suggestions in the writing up of this article. I am extremely grateful to all of my respondents in Baku who shared their views with me.

Disclosure

Author has nothing to disclose.

Footnotes

1 Representative of the PFA elite, July 2018, Baku, interviewed by the author.

2 These were the main issues frequently expressed and strongly emphasized by the interviewees.

3 He referred to the flag of the First Republic of Azerbaijan. It is a three colored flag: blue (symbolising Turkism), red (for modernization) and green (for Islam).

4 A historian and member of opposition elite, July 2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

5 High ranked party representative of the PFA, November 2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

6 Representative of the Musavat Party, December 2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

7 This statement has been frequently expressed by the respondents during the fieldworks, August 1998, December 2016, April 2017, Baku.

8 Scholars, journalists and experts, 2016–2017, Baku, interviewed by the author.

9 Experts, December 2019, Baku, interviewed by the author.

10 The slogan‘Turkism, Modernization, and Islamism’ is the essence of the ideology known as Musavatism (Musavatcilik). For a detailed discussion, see Altstadt (Reference Altstadt1992) and Swietochowski (Reference Swietochowski1995).

11 Ebulfez Elchibey, Chair of the Azerbaijan Popular Front Party, July 1998, Baku, interviewed by the author.

12 In Azerbaijan, until 1937, people of Azerbaijan were called Turks. As a result of the Stalinist policies of Sovietization, the majority who used to be called Turks became Azerbaijanis whereas the other ethnic minorities living in the Azerbaijan SSR kept their names. See Altstadt (Reference Altstadt1992) and Ergun (Reference Ergun2010).

13 Ebulfez Elchibey, July 1998, Baku, interviewed by the author.

14 Azerbaijanis constitute 91.6 % of the population. There are ethnic minorities living in the territory. These are Lezgins (2%), Talyshs (1.3%), Avars, Turks, Tatars, Georgians, Armenians (1.3%), Russians (1.3%) and Kurds. The majority of population is Muslims (95%). 85% of the Muslim population is Shi’a Muslims whereas 15% is Sunnis. Religious minorities include Russian Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox, and Jews. See The State Statistical Committee of the Republic of Azerbaijan (2020).

15 Government elites, July 2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

16 Government elites, July 2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

17 For a detailed discussion of ethnic minorities and majority-minority relations in Azerbaijan, see Cavadov (Reference Cavadov2000), and Siroky and Mahmudlu (Reference Siroky and Mahmudlu2016).

18 Lezgins are Caucasian people living in Southern Dagistan and Northern Azerbaijan. In Azerbaijan they mainly live in the northern rayons of Qusar, Quba, Sheki, Shamakhi, and Khachmaz (Matveeva and McCartney Reference Matveeva and McCartney1998, 217).

19 Government elite, July 2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

20 Popular Front of Azerbaijan (1996, 8).

21 Turkologist, April 1999, Baku, interviewed by the author.

22 For a thorough analysis of bilateral relations, see Ismayilov and Graham (Reference Ismayilov and Graham2016), Veliyev (Reference Veliyev2020), and Ergun (Reference Ergun and Aydın2007).

23 Hikmet Haji-zadeh, September 1998, Baku, interviewed by the author.

24 Politician from opposition, August, Reference Gezenferoglu2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

25 Historian, July 2000, Baku, interviewed by the author.

26 These are the views expressed by the respondents during fieldwork in Azerbaijan July 2000, Baku.

27 These are the views expressed by the respondent during fieldwork in Azerbaijan, July 2000, Baku.

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