1916
If you travel along the road from Bishkek to Issyk Kul, as you
leave behind the roadside yurt encampment and enter Boom Gorge there is a monument
on the right hand side of the road a series
of whitewashed stones display the date 1916. This was built to commemorate
an important event in local history.
In the summer of 1916, the Russian Empire ordered a call
up of non-Russians in the colonies that comprised
the Russian empire to help feed it's desperate war
effort in Europe. The Imperial Decree of 26th June
1916 was transmitted to Pishpek via Tashkent. It was
quite specific, the locals were not to be drafted
as combatants, but for support actities such as food
production and road building thus freeing the
soldiers on these duties for combat. The wording of the
decree was unfortunate in that it apparently referred
to «requisition» rather than «conscription»
implying that the dractees were considered as «objects»
rather than as people.
To make matters worse, rich «draftees» could pay for
substitutes to serve in their place. The poor Kyrgyz felt forgotten
and frustrated as much ill-feeling was directed towards
their feudal «overlords» (who made much use of the «substitutes»)
as against the Russians. There had already been requisitions of food
and property to help pay for the distant war and when the herdsmen
complained they were told simply that «everyone was making sacrifices».
There were attempts by the local Khans to prevent or delay
the implementation of the decree. Accoding to some sources,
the first uprising was in Khojent on July 4th 1916 and
the movement spread to other parts of Turkestan. On July
11th a mass protest took place in Tashken and the police fired
shots into the crowd. The Russians arrested an additional group and
summarily executing thirty-five people. The Russian settlers, who had
been brought into Tashkent some thirty to forty years earlier, began
looting, apparently at the instigation of the Russian police.
At this, the Central Asian response stiffened.
The revolt in Northern Kyrgyzstan seems to have been centred
on Tokmak, but although many of the surrounding villages were
raided Pishkek, itself, was more or less untroubled by the uprising
possibly because it housed a strong garrison. Mounted groups
of Kyrgyz armed with spears, pitchforks and guns began
attacking the Russian militia, imperial officials and Russian sympathizers
of all nationalities. Their first targets were the Russian police
headquarters, to acquire weapons their only source of supply.
Houses and haystacks were burnt, property stolen, women and children abducted,
and many people were killed. Two local chiefs were declared Khans, and
the idea grew up of establishing an independent state and
there were some cases where local Europeans supported the rebels
but this is often forgotten.
Prezhervalsk (Korakol) was besieged from August 10th until August 27th
and it wqas at this time that the golden baton held by the
eagle in the Prezhervalsk memorial disappeared.
The official Russian response was to declare martial law in Turkistan
(and the Caucasus as well), and a lower quota of laborers
to be drafted under the 25 June decree was announced. The
new Russian statements, however, did not change the conditions. Russian
settlers organized barricades and mounted vigilante patrols to defend
themselves and fight back. A Cossack army led by General Aninekov
was sent from Vernoe (Almaty), and others from Ferghana and Tashkent and
other regions of the far flung empire, to crush the rebellion.
Even prisoners of war, who were being held in Russian POW camps
in Central Asia, were recruited by the Russian generals as mercenaries
with regular pay. The vigilantes and the army were given free reign and
a the result was a serious of massive reprisals
slaughtering flocks, burning down Kyrgyz villages, killing men women and
children, (and according to eyewitnesses, massacred even babies in the
cradle) and hundreds of people were arrested. It is said
that the trials in Pishpek were so disorganized that the authorities
lost track of the people that had been executed..
More Russian settlers were brought in to occupy confiscated
Central Asian land and homes. Contemporary reports estimated that between
25 June 1916 and October of 1917, some one and one half
million Central Asians were killed by the Russian forces and settlers,
with the Russian casualties numbering around three thousand. Out of an estimated
total population of 768,000 Kyrgyz, some 120,000 were killed
in the fighting and the aftermath according to one
source, over 41% of the Kyrgyz population from the North of the
country were killed. and another 120,000 fled across
the border to China, (referred to as «The Great Escape»)
many dying en route in the snows, of hunger, or as the
victims of bandits. There is a mountain pass called Ashu
Surk «the Pass of Bones» which
got it«s name from the number that died here in their
attempted flight. The Aaly Tokombaev Museum in Bishkek has an exhibition
dedicated to the exodus of many Kyrgyz to China in 1916 following
the uprising. At least half of the Central Asian livestock was
destroyed.
The unrest and period of uncertainty was to continue, in various
guises, well into the 1930s culminating in the Basmachi rebellion.
The event has been portrayed as a conspiracy organized by German
agents and Turkish prisoners of war; as a national liberation
uprising; and as an attempt at genocide.
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