Chechen people

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Chechens (Noxçi)
Total population

1.75 - 2 million est. worldwide in 2002

Regions with significant populations
Flag of Russia Russia 1.36 million (including in Chechnya)
Flag of Chechnya Chechnya 1,031,000
Ingushetia 95,000
Flag of Turkey Turkey 90,000 (estimated)
Dagestan 88,000
Flag of Kazakhstan Kazakhstan 75,000 (estimated)
Flag of Jordan Jordan 45,000 (estimated)
Flag of Georgia (country) Georgia 40,000 (estimated)
Flag of Syria Syria 40,000 (estimated)
Flag of Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia 20,000 (estimated)
Moscow 14,000 (registered)
80,000 (estimated)[1]
Stavropol Krai 13,000
Flag of Azerbaijan Azerbaijan 10,000 (estimated)
Rest of the world combined 250,000 - 500,000
Languages
Chechen, Russian
Religions
Sunni Islam (Sufism)
Related ethnic groups
Ingush, Bats, Kists

Chechens (Chechen: Hохчи / Noxçi) constitute the largest native ethnic group originating in the North Caucasus region. They refer to themselves as Nokhchii (singular Nokhchi or Nokhcho), which comes from the name of a large Chechen tribe, the Nokhchmekhkakhoi, and their homeland.

The isolated mountain terrain of the Caucasus and the strategic value outsiders have placed on the areas settled by Chechens has contributed much to the Chechen community ethos and helped shape a unique national character.

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[edit] Origins of the word Chechen

The term "Chechen" is ultimately believed to derive from the Iranian name for the Nokhchii and it first occurs in Arabic sources from the 8th century. According to popular tradition, the Russian term "Chechen" comes from the name of the village of Chechen-Aul, where the Chechens defeated Russian soldiers in 1732. The word "Chechen", however, occurs in Russian sources as early as 1692 and the Russians probably derived it from the Kabardian "Shashan".[2]

[edit] Geography

The Chechen people are mainly inhabitants of Chechnya, which is internationally recognized as part of the Russian Federation. There are also significant Chechen populations in other Russian regions (especially in Dagestan, Ingushetia and Moscow).

Outside Russia, countries with significant Chechen diaspora populations are Georgia, Kazakhstan, Turkey, and the Arab world (especially Jordan and Syria). These are mainly descendants of people who had to leave Chechnya during the Caucasian War, which led to the annexing of Chechnya by the Russian Empire around 1850, and the 1944 Soviet deportation in the case of Kazakhstan. More recently, tens of thousands of Chechen refugees settled in the European Union and elsewhere as the result of the Chechen Wars since 1994.

[edit] History

The Vainakh tribes, the ancestors of the Chechens and Ingush, lived in the mountains of the region since the prehistory (there's an archeological evidence of historical continuity dating back since 10,000 B.C.[3]). In the 16th century, they began settling in the lowlands and the Islamization of the Chechen people began under the influence of bordering nationalities.[4]

This period was followed by the long and difficult Russian expansion into the Caucasus, when the Chechens with their extensive lowlands territory and access to the central pass were prime targets of the Russian conquest efforts. During the wars, large numbers of lives due to the Russian scorched earth tactics which decimated the local population as the tsarist troops tried to break the fierce resistance while large numbers of the muhajir refugees emigrated or were forcibly deported to the Middle East.[5] Since then there have been various Chechen rebellions against Russian power, as well as resistance to Russification and the Soviet Union's collectivization and antireligious campaigns.

In 1944 the Moscow's repressions gained apogeum as the Chechens and Ingush, together with several other Caucasian nationalities, were ordered by Joseph Stalin to be all deported en masse to Kazakhstan and Siberia and at least one-quarter and perhaps half of the entire Chechen nation perished in the process.[5] Though "rehabilitated" in 1956 and allowed to return the next year, the survivors lost economic resources and civil rights and, under both Soviet and post-Soviet governments, they have been the objects of (official and unofficial) discrimination and discriminatory public discourse.[5] The Chechen attempts to regain independence in the 1990s after the fall of the Soviet Union led to the two next bloody wars with the new Russian state.

See also: History of Chechnya

[edit] Language

Main article: Chechen language

The main languages of the Chechen people are Chechen and Russian. Chechen belongs to the family of Nakh languages (North-Central Caucasian Languages). Literary Chechen is based on the central lowland dialect. Other related languages include Ingush, which has speakers in Ingushetia, and Batsi, which is the language of the cattle-farmers in part of Georgia.

[edit] Culture

Prior to the adoption of Islam, the Chechens practiced a unique blend of religious traditions and beliefs. They partook in numerous rites and rituals, many of them pertaining to farming; these included rain rites, a celebration that occurred on the first day of plowing, as well as the Day of the Thunderer Sela and the Day of the Goddess Tusholi.

Chechen society is structured around "tukhums" (unions of clans) and 130 teip, or clans. The teips are based more on land than on blood and have an uneasy relationship in peacetime, but are bonded together during war. Teips are further subdivided into gars (branches), and gars into nekye (patronymic families). The Chechen social code is called “Nokhchallah” where "Nokhcho" (Noxçuo) stands for "Chechen" and may be loosely translated as "Chechen character". The Chechen code of honor implies moral and ethical behavior, generosity and the will to safeguard the honor of women.

[edit] Religion

Chechnya is predominantly Muslim. Some adhere to a Sufi tradition called Muridism, while about half of Chechens belong to Sufi brotherhoods, or tariqa. The two Sufi tariqas that spread in the North Caucasus were the Naqshbandiya and the Qadiriya. The Naqshbandiya is particularly strong in Dagestan and eastern Chechnya, whereas the Qadiriya has most of its adherents in the rest of Chechnya and Ingushetia.

Almost all Chechens belong to the Hanafi school of thought of Sunni Islam.[5] Salafism was introduced to the population in the 1950s. Some of the rebels involved in the Chechen wars are Salafists, but the majority are not.[6]

[edit] Gallery

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • The Chechens: A Handbook, by Amjad Jaimoukha, London, New York: Routledge, 2005
  1. ^ Moscow's Chechens fear siege fall-out, BBC News, 26 October, 2002
  2. ^ Jaimoukha p.12
  3. ^ Bernice Wuethrich (19 May 2000). "Peering Into the Past, With Words". Science 288 (5469): 1158. 
  4. ^ Sven Gunnar Simonsen, Chechnya
  5. ^ a b c d Who are the Chechens? by Johanna Nichols, University of California, Berkeley.
  6. ^ Shattering the Al Qaeda-Chechen Myth: Part 1, by Brian Glyn Williams, The Jamestown Foundation, October 2, 2003