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 Spring 2003 (11.1)
 Page
      9
 Readers' Forum
 The Real
      Caucasians
 
 I know this may sound like a strange question, but what do you
      tell people when they ask: "What is Azeri?" I know
      my recently-adopted children are Azeri, but is this a race, or
      are the people living there Russian, since Azerbaijan was once
      part of Russia? And is an Azeri person a Caucasian or something
      else? I only ask because people have been asking me this question
      lately. When they wonder where Azerbaijan is and I tell them
      that it's located along the southern border of Russia, they reply,
      "Well, then the children must be Russian." Can anyone
      explain this to me: are these children considered to be of Russian
      descent or not?
 
 A parent of a newly adopted child from Azerbaijan,
 AzerbaijanAdopt Listserv at Yahoo.com
 Editor: We print the reply of Sanan Nasibli,
      another Listserv member, with his permission: 
 Azeri is a nationality, just like "American" is a nationality
      of all naturalized citizens in the US. Today's Azerbaijan was
      part of the Russian Empire from 1828 to 1918. In 1828, at the
      end of the Russo-Iranian War, these leaders of these countries
      agreed to split Azerbaijan along the Araz River. Russia took
      the northern lands [which has become an independent country -
      the Azerbaijan Republic - which today has a population of about
      8 million] and Iran got the southern part [which now has a population
      three times greater, estimated at 25-30 million]. Ever since,
      we have gone separate routes but have kept our language, traditions,
      customs and folklore.
 
 In May 1918, after the collapse of the Russian Empire, Azerbaijan
      broke free and declared independence as the Azerbaijan Democratic
      Republic. The country existed only two years and could not resist
      Communist Russia's aggression. It fell in April 1920 becoming
      the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, a part of the future
      USSR.
 
 In December 1991, after the collapse of the USSR, we regained
      our independence and are now called the Republic of Azerbaijan.
 
 Despite a lot of changes that Russia brought to our development
      (mainly modernization), we have succeeded in keeping our Azerbaijani
      heritage. We speak Azeri, a Turkic language. I would define our
      culture as Caucasian (meaning the Caucasian people who are unique
      to the region of the Caucasus). We have deep influences from
      Turkic, Iranian and other Middle Eastern cultures. [In the Republic],
      Russia has also influenced our development a lot, bringing modernization
      into the language, educational system, culture and other aspects
      of life.
 
 I want to thank all of the families who have adopted Azerbaijani
      children for being ambassadors of my Homeland. The more your
      family and friends know the world, the more informed U.S. foreign
      policy will be.
 
 Sanan Nasibli
 Boston, Massachusetts
 Editor: We also reprint Kimi Abernathy's answer.
      Again with her permission. 
 Actually your children are the true "Caucasians". Azerbaijanis
      are a Turkic people. Azeri is a Turkic language. Azerbaijan was
      part of the Soviet Union (not by choice) but the people have
      more in common with Iran, Turkey, Georgia and even Armenia, than
      with Russia. The largest population of Azerbaijanis live in Iran
      (an estimated 25-30 million). The language, customs, food, religion,
      heritage and DNA imprint is Middle Eastern. Just listen to the
      traditional Azerbaijan music-that says it all!
 
 Kimi Abernathy of Bell Buckle, Tennessee
 
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