Overview
officially Republic of Tajikistan, Tajik Tojikiston or Jumhurii
Tojikiston, Tajikistan also spelled Tadzhikistan
Country, Central Asia.
Area: 55,300 sq mi (143,100 sq km). Population (2005 est.):
6,849,000. Capital: Dushanbe. The majority of the population are Tajiks;
Uzbeks make up a large minority. Language: Tajik (official). Religion:
Islam (predominantly Sunni). Currency: somoni. Tajikistan is a
mountainous country; about half of its territory lies at elevations
above 10,000 ft (3,000 m), with the Pamirs dominating the east. The
entire region is prone to seismic activity. The Amu Darya and Syr Darya
rivers cross it and are used for irrigation. Cotton, cattle, fruits,
vegetables, and grains are raised. Heavy industries include coal mining,
petroleum and natural gas extraction, metalworking, and nitrogen
fertilizer production. Notable light industries are cotton milling, food
processing, and textiles. Tajikistan is a republic with two legislative
houses; the chief of state is the president, and the head of government
is the prime minister. Settled by Persians c. the 6th century bc,
Tajikistan was part of the empires of the Persian Achaemenian dynasty
and of Alexander the Great and his successors. In the 7th–8th century ad
it was conquered by the Arabs, who introduced Islam. The Uzbeks
controlled the region in the 15th–18th centuries. In the 1860s the
Russian Empire took over much of Tajikistan. In 1924 it became an
autonomous republic under the administration of the Uzbek S.S.R., and it
gained union republic status in 1929. It achieved independence with the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Civil war raged through much of
the 1990s between government forces and an opposition composed mostly of
Islamic militants. A peace agreement was reached in 1997.
Profile
Official name Jumhurii Tojikistan (Republic of Tajikistan)
Form of government parliamentary republic with two legislative houses
(National Assembly [341]; House of Representatives [63])
Chief of state President
Head of government Prime Minister
Capital Dushanbe
Official language Tajik (Tojik)
Official religion none
Monetary unit somoni (TJS)
Population estimate (2008) 6,839,000
Total area (sq mi) 55,300
Total area (sq km) 143,100
1Includes 8 members appointed by the President and 1 seat reserved for
the former president.
Main
officially Republic of Tajikistan, Tajik Tojikiston or Jumhurii
Tojikiston, Tajikistan also spelled Tadzhikistan
country lying in the heart of Central Asia. It is bordered by
Kyrgyzstan on the north, China on the east, Afghanistan on the south,
and Uzbekistan on the west and northwest. Tajikistan includes the
Gorno-Badakhshan (“Mountain Badakhshan”) autonomous region, with its
capital at Khorugh (Khorog). Tajikistan encompasses the smallest amount
of land among the five Central Asian states, but in terms of elevation
it surpasses them all, enclosing more and higher mountains than any
other country in the region. Tajikistan was a constituent (union)
republic of the Soviet Union from 1929 until its independence in 1991.
The capital is Dushanbe.
Several ethnic ties and outside influences complicate Tajikistan’s
national identity to a greater extent than in other Central Asian
republics. The Tajik people share close kinship and their language with
a much larger population of the same nationality living in northeastern
Afghanistan, whose population also includes a large proportion speaking
Dari, a dialect of Persian intelligible to Tajiks. Despite sectarian
differences (most Tajiks are Sunni Muslims, while Iranians are
predominantly Shīʿites), Tajiks also have strong ties to the culture and
people of Iran; the Tajik and Persian languages are closely related and
mutually intelligible. The Tajiks’ centuries-old economic symbiosis with
oasis-dwelling Uzbeks also somewhat confuses the expression of a
distinctive Tajik national identity. Since the early years of
independence, Tajikistan has been wracked by conflict between the
government and the Islamic opposition and its allies.
The land
Relief
More than nine-tenths of Tajikistan’s territory is mountainous;
about half lies 10,000 feet (3,000 metres) or more above sea level. The
Trans-Alay range, part of the Tien Shan system, reaches into the north.
The massive ranges of the southern Tien Shan—the Turkestan Mountains and
the slightly lower Zeravshan and Gissar ranges—define the east-central
portion of the country. The ice-clad peaks of the Pamir mountain system
occupy the southeast. Some of Central Asia’s highest mountains, notably
the Soviet-named Lenin (23,405 feet [7,134 metres]) and Communism
(24,590 feet [7,495 metres]) peaks, are found in the northern portion of
the Pamirs. The valleys, though important for Tajikistan’s human
geography, make up less than one-tenth of the country’s area. The
largest are the western portion of the Fergana Valley in the north and
the Gissar, Vakhsh, Yavansu, Obikiik, Lower Kofarnihon (Kafirnigan), and
Panj (Pyandzh) valleys to the south.
The entire southern Central Asian region, including Tajikistan, lies
in an active seismic belt where severe earthquakes are common.
Seismologists have long studied the region, especially in connection
with the massive hydroelectric dams and other public works in the area.
Drainage and soils
The dense river network that drains the republic includes two large
swift rivers, the upper courses of the Syr Darya and the Amu Darya,
together with their tributaries, notably the Vakhsh and Kofarnihon. The
Amu Darya is formed by the confluence of the Panj and Vakhsh rivers; the
Panj forms much of the republic’s southern boundary. Most of the rivers
flow east to west and eventually drain into the Aral Sea basin. The
rivers have two high-water periods each year: in the spring, when rains
fall and mountain snows melt, and in the summer, when the glaciers begin
to melt. The summer flow is particularly helpful for irrigation
purposes.
The few lakes in Tajikistan lie mostly in the Pamir region; the
largest is Lake Karakul, lying at an elevation of about 13,000 feet.
Lake Sarez was formed in 1911 during an earthquake, when a colossal
landslide dammed the Murgab River. The Zeravshan Range contains
Iskanderkul, which, like most of the country’s lakes, is of glacial
origin.
Tajikistan’s soil is poor in humus but rich in mineral nutrients.
Sand, shingle, scree, bare rock, and permanent snow and ice cover about
two-thirds of the surface.
Climate
The climate of Tajikistan is sharply continental and changes with
altitude. In the warm-temperate valley areas, summers are hot and dry;
the mean temperature in July is 81° F (27° C) in Khujand (Khojand) and
86° F (30° C) in Kŭlob (Kulyab), farther south. The corresponding
January figures are 30° F (−1° C) and 36° F (2° C), respectively. In
very cold winters, temperatures of −4° F (−20° C) and lower have been
recorded. Annual precipitation is slight and ranges between 6 and 10
inches (150 and 250 millimetres) but is higher in the Gissar Valley. In
the highlands conditions are different: the mean January temperature for
Murghob in the Pamirs is −3° F (−20° C), and temperatures can drop to
−51° F (−46 ° C). In this area precipitation barely reaches 2 to 3
inches a year, most of it falling in summer. Moist air masses move from
the west up the valleys, suddenly reaching low-temperature areas and
producing locally heavy precipitation, mainly heavy snow of as much as
30 to 60 inches of annual accumulation.
Plant and animal life
The topographic and climatic variety gives Tajikistan an extremely
varied plant life, with more than 5,000 kinds of flowers alone.
Generally grasses, bushes, and shrubs predominate. The country’s animal
life is abundant and diverse and includes species such as the great gray
lizard, jerboa, and gopher in the deserts and deer, tiger, jackal, and
wildcat in wooded areas or reedy thickets. Brown bears live at lower
mountain levels, and goats and golden eagles higher up.
Settlement patterns
Much of Tajikistan is unsuitable for human habitation, but those
desert and semidesert lands suitable for irrigated farming have been
turned into flourishing oases, with cotton plantations, gardens, and
vineyards. The population density is also high in the large villages
strung out in clusters along the foothill regions. There are also narrow
valleys that support small villages (qishlaqs) surrounded by apple
orchards, apricot trees, mulberry groves, and small cultivated fields.
Less than one-third of the country’s Tajiks live in urban areas,
including the two largest cities, Dushanbe and Khujand. Smaller towns
include the old settlements of Kŭlob, Qŭrghonteppa (Kurgan-Tyube), and
Ŭroteppa (Ura-Tyube) and the newer Qayroqqum, Norak, and Tursunzoda.
Russians no longer dominate Dushanbe’s ethnic mixture; they constitute
less than one-third of the city’s inhabitants. In Tajikistan, as in the
rest of Central Asia, there has been a general trend toward
ruralization. Since 1970 the urban proportion of the population has
declined, in part because the rate of natural population increase is
greater among the rural population.
Most Tajiks continue to live in qishlaqs. Such settlements usually
consist of 200 to 700 single-family houses built along an irrigation
canal or the banks of a river. Traditionally, mud fences surround the
houses and flat roofs cover them, and each domicile is closely connected
with an adjacent orchard or vineyard. In the mountains the qishlaqs,
sited in narrow valleys, form smaller settlements, usually 15 to 20
households. On the steep slopes the flat roof of one house often serves
as the yard for the house above it. This mode of home construction makes
Tajikistan’s mountain villages especially vulnerable to damage from the
frequent strong earthquakes that characterize this region.
The people
The name Tajik came to denote a distinct nationality only in the
modern period; not until the 1920s did an official Tajik
territorial-administrative unit exist under that name. The area’s
population is ethnically mixed, as it has been for centuries; but more
than three-fifths of the population is ethnically Tajik, a proportion
now rising as non-Tajiks emigrate to escape the protracted civil war.
On the basis of language, customs, and other traits, the Tajiks can
be subdivided into a number of distinct groups. The Pamir Tajiks within
the Gorno-Badakhshan autonomous region include minority peoples speaking
Wakhī, Shughnī, Rōshānī, Khufī, Yāzgulāmī, Ishkashimī, and Bartang, all
Iranian languages. Another distinct group is formed by the Yaghnābīs,
direct descendants of the ancient Sogdians, who live in the Zeravshan
River basin.
So closely are the Tajiks mixed with neighbouring Uzbeks that the
Soviet partition of the area in 1924 failed to segregate the two
nationalities with any degree of thoroughness. With nearly one million
Tajiks in Uzbekistan and more than one million Uzbeks in Tajikistan,
these nationalities remain in intimate, though not always friendly,
interrelation. The country’s other ethnic groups include Russians,
Tatars, Kyrgyz, Ukrainians, Germans, Jews, and Armenians.
The economy
Tajikistan’s economy depends on agriculture, which employs
two-fifths of the labour force. The civil war that followed Tajikistan’s
independence devastated agriculture and industry in the republic.
Resources
Tajikistan possesses rich mineral deposits. Important metallic ores
are iron, lead, zinc, antimony, mercury, gold, tin, and tungsten.
Nonmetallic minerals include common salt, carbonates, fluorite, arsenic,
quartz sand, asbestos, and precious and semiprecious stones. Energy
resources include sizable coal deposits and smaller reserves of natural
gas and petroleum. Some of the fast-flowing mountain streams have been
exploited as hydroelectric power sources.
Agriculture
Farming still leads industry in importance in the economy of
Tajikistan, and cotton growing surpasses all other categories of the
country’s agriculture. Other important branches include the raising of
livestock—including long-horned cattle, Gissar sheep, and goats—and the
cultivation of fruits, grains, and vegetables. Tajikistan’s farmers grow
wheat and barley and have expanded rice cultivation. Horticulture has
been important in the territory of Tajikistan since antiquity, and
apricots, pears, apples, plums, quinces, cherries, pomegranates, figs,
and nuts are produced. The country exports almonds, dried apricots, and
grapes.
Agriculture in Tajikistan would be severely limited without extensive
irrigation. By the end of the 1930s the Soviet government had built two
main canals, the Vakhsh and the Gissar, and followed these with two
joint Tajik-Uzbek projects, the Great Fergana and North Fergana canals,
using conscripted unskilled labour in a program that drew wide criticism
from outside observers for its high toll of fatalities. After World War
II the Dalverzin and Parkhar-Chubek irrigation systems were built, along
with the Mŭminobod, Kattasoy, and Selbur reservoirs; the Mirzachol
irrigation system; and a water tunnel from the Vakhsh River to the
Yovonsu Valley.
Pesticides and chemical fertilizers used on the cotton fields have
damaged the environment and led to health problems in the population.
The upriver irrigation systems carry these pollutants into the rivers
descending from Tajikistan’s mountains and into neighbouring republics.
Industry
Tajikistan’s light industry is based on its agricultural production
and includes cotton-cleaning mills and silk factories; the Dushanbe
textile complex is the country’s largest. Other branches of light
industry include the manufacture of knitted goods and footwear, tanning,
and sewing. There is a large carpet-making factory in Qayroqqum.
Food-processing industries concentrate on local agricultural products,
which include grapes and other fruits, various vegetable oils, tobacco,
and geranium oil, which is used in perfume. The metalworking industry
produces looms, power equipment, cables, and agricultural and household
implements.
Most of the electric power generated in Tajikistan is hydroelectric.
Major power stations operate on the Syr Darya at Qayroqqum and on the
Vakhsh River at Norak and Golovnaya. A thermal station supplements them
near Dushanbe. The chief mining and ore-dressing area is in the north;
coal mining and oil extraction are among the oldest industries in the
country. The extraction of natural gas began in the mid-1960s at
Kyzyl-Tumshuk and in fields near Dushanbe, and a chemical plant built in
1967 produces nitrogen fertilizer.
Transportation
Tajikistan’s limited railroads handle just under half of the
country’s freight turnover, the rest of it going by truck. More than
half of the roads and highways have paved surfaces. Airline flights to
Tehrān and Islāmābād, Pak., connect Khujand and a few other towns with
the outside world via Dushanbe.
Administration and social conditions
Government
In 1994 voters approved a new constitution to replace the Soviet-era
constitution that had been in effect since 1978 and amended after
independence. The new constitution establishes legislative, executive,
and judicial branches. Unique among Central Asian republics,
Tajikistan’s constitution provides for a strong legislature rather than
a dominant executive, though the president is head of state.
Members of the legislature, a unicameral National Assembly, are
elected to five-year terms. The legislature has the authority to enact
and annul laws, interpret the constitution, and confirm presidential
appointees. The president is elected directly for a maximum of two
five-year terms and appoints the cabinet and high court justices,
subject to approval by the legislature. The highest courts include the
Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court, the Supreme Economic Court (for
commercial cases), and a Court of Gorno-Badakhshan, which has
jurisdiction over the Gorno-Badakhshan autonomous region. Although the
constitution lists numerous rights and freedoms of citizens, it provides
a mechanism by which these rights and freedoms can be, and are, severely
restricted by law.
Education
With Tajikistan’s government immobilized by domestic political
instability, the educational system has received insufficient direction
and support.
Early in the 20th century, Tajiks in those Central Asian communities
where the Jadid reformist movement had installed its New Method schools
received the rudiments of a modern, though still Muslim, education. The
educational establishment was dominated until the 1920s, however, by the
standard network of Muslim maktabs and madrasahs. Soviet efforts
eventually brought secular education to the entire population, and
levels of Tajik literacy are now relatively high. The country’s higher
educational establishments included numerous research institutes that
functioned under the separate budget of the Academy of Sciences in
Moscow until the breakup of the U.S.S.R. Since then, a drastic decrease
in financial support from the government has curtailed much of these
institutions’ former activity. The chronic problem of placing indigenous
graduates in employment commensurate with their training besets the
Tajiks, for outsiders such as Slavs, Tatars, and Jews have long held
most academic and bureaucratic positions in the republic.
Health and welfare
The system of medical care in Tajikistan does not adequately protect
public health in a time when environmental pollution has become a major
problem owing to the careless application of pesticides and chemicals in
agriculture. Moreover, poor health and sanitary conditions permit the
easy transmission of communicable diseases. Both the inhospitable
environment and the low general standard of living have led to infant
and maternal mortality rates exceeding those of any other Central Asian
republic, and the rates throughout Central Asia far exceed those
recorded in the West. Amenities such as paved roads, modern
communications, potable running water, indoor toilets, and modern indoor
heating and electrification are still confined to urban areas and thus
benefit mostly non-Tajiks. Conditions in most rural areas remain
primitive, though the state has worked to improve housing and community
services. Although a high percentage of rural women work on the farms,
they still tend to raise many children.
Edward Allworth
Cultural life
The area now called Tajikistan has an ancient culture, and many
popular traditions and customs have been retained, including the
costumes worn by both men and women and such ancient festivals as the
New Year celebration, known as Naurūz, which takes place on March 21,
the period of the vernal equinox. A newer festival celebrates the
gathering of the cotton crop. These colourful affairs incorporate horse
races, horsemanship, and wrestling contests. Although religion was
actively persecuted during the Soviet period, Muslims (mostly Sunnite)
continued regular mosque worship and observed religious holidays where
possible. In the late 1980s, religious persecution abated and religious
practices revived.
The principal language of the republic, Tajik (known to its speakers
as Tojikī), with distinct northern and southern dialects, belongs to the
southwest group of Iranian languages, in the Indo-European family; it is
very closely related to Dari and is also used widely in neighbouring
Afghanistan. The language of the Pamir Tajiks belongs to the eastern
Iranian group. Tajik was formerly written in a modified Arabic and later
in the Roman alphabet, but since 1940 it has used a modified Cyrillic
script. Writers from this region have made notable contributions to
literature since the 10th century ad, and a vigorous folk literature
continues.
A number of Tajik poets and novelists achieved fame during the 20th
century. They include Abdalrauf Fitrat, whose dialogues Munazärä (1909;
The Dispute) and Qiyamät (1923; Last Judgment) have been reprinted many
times in Tajik, Russian, and Uzbek, and Sadriddin Ayni, known for his
novel Dokhunda (1930; The Mountain Villager) and for his autobiography,
Yoddoshtho (1949–54; published in English as Bukhara); both Fitrat and
Ayni were bilingual in Uzbek and Tajik. Abū al-Qāsim Lāhūtī’s poem Taj
va bayraq (1935; Crown and Banner) and Mirzo Tursunzade’s Hasani
arobakash (1954; Hasan the Cart Driver) respond to the changes of the
Soviet era; the latter’s lyric cycle Sadoyi Osiyo (1956; The Voice of
Asia) won major communist awards. A number of young female writers,
notably the popular poet Gulrukhsor Safieva, have begun circulating
their work in newspapers, magazines, and Tajik-language collections.
Tajikistan’s government recognized Tajik as the official language of
the state in 1989, and the new constitution affirms this status while
according Russian special privilege. The Tajik language has secure
status in cultural life—which the widespread use of Russian, and at one
time Uzbek, had limited—as well as in administration and education.
The Tajik National Theatre, which was established in 1929, long
presented opera, ballet, musical comedy, and puppetry. Regional theatres
and troupes later appeared in towns such as Nau. Tajik studios have
produced feature films and documentaries and have dubbed films from
elsewhere. Radio and television services expanded during the later
decades of Soviet rule, and Dushanbe has had a television centre since
1960. Broadcasting and the performing arts suffered deep cutbacks after
1985, however, when Soviet subsidies diminished and then ceased
entirely.
Aleksandr Ilyich Imshenetsky
Edward Allworth
History
The Tajiks are the direct descendants of the Iranian peoples
whose continuous presence in Central Asia and northern Afghanistan is
attested from the middle of the 1st millennium bc. The ancestors of the
Tajiks constituted the core of the ancient population of Khwārezm
(Khorezm) and Bactria, which formed part of Transoxania (Sogdiana). They
were included in the empires of Persia and Alexander the Great, and they
intermingled with such later invaders as the Kushāns and Hepthalites in
the 1st–6th centuries ad. Over the course of time, the eastern Iranian
dialect that was used by the ancient Tajiks eventually gave way to
Farsi, a western dialect spoken in Iran and Afghanistan.
The Arab conquest of Central Asia that began in the mid-7th century
brought Islam to the region. But tribal feuds weakened the Arabs, and,
with the rise of the Sāmānids (819–999), the Tajiks came under the rule
of an Iranian dynasty. The first Turkic invaders (from the northeast)
seized this area of Transoxania in 999, and, because both conquered and
conquerors were Muslim, in time many Tajiks—especially those in the
valleys of the Syr Darya and Amu Darya—became Turkicized. This resulted
in the transformation of a formerly purely Iranian land into
“Turkistan.” The name Tajik, originally given to the Arabs by the local
population, came to be applied by Turkic invaders and overlords to those
elements of the sedentary population that continued to speak Iranian
languages.
Until the mid-18th century the Tajiks were part of the emirate of
Bukhara, but then the Afghans conquered lands south and southwest of the
Amu Darya with their Tajik population, including the city of Balkh, an
ancient Tajik cultural centre.
Russian conquests in Central Asia in the 1860s and ’70s brought a
number of Tajiks in the Zeravshan and Fergana valleys under the direct
government of Russia, while the emirate of Bukhara in effect became a
Russian protectorate in 1868.
After the Russian Revolution of 1917, a considerable proportion of
the Tajik people was included in the Turkestan A.S.S.R. established in
April 1918. In August 1920 the Revolution was extended to the khanate of
Bukhara, which embraced most of the territory occupied by modern
Tajikistan; the Bukharan People’s Soviet Republic was declared in
October 1920, and early in 1921 the Soviet army captured Dushanbe and
Kŭlob (Kulyab). Tajikistan was the scene of the Basmachi revolt in
1922–23, and rebel bands under Ibrahim Bek operated in eastern Bukhara
until 1931. The Tajik A.S.S.R. was created as part of the Uzbek Soviet
Socialist Republic (S.S.R.) in 1925; in January 1925 a Special Pamirs
region was created out of the Kyrgyz and Tajik parts of the Pamirs, and
in December 1925 this region was renamed the Gorno-Badakhshan autonomous
region. In 1929 the status of the Tajik A.S.S.R. was raised to that of a
Soviet socialist republic. The change in status marked the first time
that the Tajik people had their own state, albeit not a fully
independent one, as it was still part of the Soviet Union.
As a full-fledged member of the Soviet Union, the underdeveloped,
mountainous Tajik S.S.R. underwent a spectacular social and economic
transformation. A sense of nationhood was instilled in the Tajik
people—particularly by B.G. Gafurov, the leader of Tajikistan’s
Communist Party from 1946 to 1956 and a historian respected in the West.
Dams were constructed for electric power generation and irrigation, and
industry was developed in the Vakhsh River valley. Soviet health care
and education were gradually introduced in the republic. The village of
Dushanbe (known as Stalinabad from 1929 to 1961) was transformed into a
modern capital city boasting the Tajik State University (1951) and the
Tajik Academy of Sciences (1948). Such progress notwithstanding,
Tajikistan remained the poorest republic of the Soviet Union.
The disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 led to the somewhat
reluctant declaration of full independence on Sept. 9, 1991. Once
independence was achieved, turmoil—degenerating into civil war—plagued
the new country; communists fought to retain power in the face of
opposition from an alliance of Islamic and democratic forces. The
presidential election of November 1991 was won by Tajikistan’s former
communist strongman Rahman Nabiyev, and in March 1992 massive nonviolent
demonstrations protesting his dismissal of opposition elements began in
Dushanbe. After government forces opened fire on the demonstrators in
April, violence soon spread to the southern city of Kŭlob and elsewhere.
Opposition forces drove Nabiyev from office in September and briefly
took power, but by November a government led by Imomali Rakhmonov (from
March 2007, Emomalii Rakhmon) and backed by Russian troops had regained
control, ending the first phase of the civil war. A mass exodus to
Afghanistan followed. Sporadic fighting continued as the Islamic
fundamentalist forces and their allies, now based in Afghanistan,
continued to launch attacks on the Russian and Tajik troops guarding the
border. By the mid-1990s the fighting had left tens of thousands dead
and had displaced more than a half million people. In 1994 government
and rebel elements reached a tenuous cease-fire, and Rakhmonov was
subsequently elected president. Sporadic fighting continued until June
1997, when a peace agreement brokered by the United Nations, Russia, and
Iran essentially ended the war and produced some order in the strife
that had characterized much of Tajik life since the country’s
independence. The endemic political unrest had a deleterious effect on
the country’s economy, which was dependent in large part on foreign aid.
Following the agreement rebels began to reenter political and social
life, though small groups of dissenters continued to engage in attacks
on government targets, and Rakhmonov was elected to another term in
office in 1999 with the support of some of his former adversaries. The
flow of militants from Afghanistan slowed after the overthrow of the
Taliban in late 2001, but smaller numbers of determined Islamic
extremists continued to sift across the border, disrupting life and
commerce in Tajikistan and other Central Asian states. Moreover, the
fall of the Taliban led to an upswing in narcotics production in
Afghanistan, and Tajikistan soon became a major transit point for Afghan
heroin and opium headed for markets in Europe and elsewhere.
Denis Sinor
Ed.