ASKAR AKAEV
This information is based upon information from the official Akaev
website.
Askar Akaev was born on November 10, 1944 in the small
township of Kyzyl Bairak in the Kemin district. There were only
about 3540 households in the township at that
time.
The Chin Kemin region is famous for its remarkable natural beauty.
Many songs and legends have been created about it and the legendary
Manas are supposed to have organized hose games in the valley
for his followers.
In the 1920«s his father, Akay Tokoev a descendent
of a "wellborn" family, fled to neighbouring
Kazakhstan to escape a "war against the bourgeoisie",
where he met Asel, his future wife and the mother of Askar Akaev.
The family also suffered later in the period of Stalin's purges,
when Alkay was arrested, again because his wellborn ancestry. He spent
more than a year in a jail where his health suffered and
on returning home, he turned completely blind.
The youngest child in the family, he had four brothers. In 1942,
Kuchor Akaev, the family«s eldest son, was killed in World
War II The Great Patriotic War defending Leningrad.
The whole burden of raising four sons was mounted on shoulders
of the mother Asel, who worked as a simple
collective farm worker and was awarded with government medals and honors,
but her children and cares about their education were always the most
important thing for her.
Askar Akaev«s father passed away in 1967 and Asel
lived for another 30 years and died being just three years short
of her hundredth birthday. Her 20 grandchildren and 12 great
grand children were her main delight and relief throughout her old age.
According to the family friends, Askar was an intelligent,
gentle, and a hardworking boy who never refused to help anyone
if asked to do so. Realizing that his father could
not see, little Askar guided him to visit with aksakals (old men),
who in their leisure time would gather for a cup of tea
and a chat. He says that for him those visits with the old men
turned out to be a good school. It was from those
wise old men that the young Askar says he learned many interesting
and useful things.
When a schoolboy he read a lot the books about Alexander
the Great, Caesar, Genghis-Khan, Tamerlane, A. Suvorov and Napoleon.
Like all his fellow schoolmates he dreamed of becoming a historian.
But suddenly everything turned upside-down. We he learned about
a new subject physics. Apparently, he became so deeply
interested in modeling an amazing toy car and aircraft engines
that he decided to become an engineer-designer.
In 1961, Askar Akaev finished his secondary school with a gold
medal (distinction). There is a story that at the final
examination in chemistry, when Askar demonstrated a lab experiment
with acids, one of the board members who was so amazed with
the student«s knowledge, said: «Let us give him
a gold medal before he blows up the school!»
Askar started his professional career as a metalworker at the
«Frunzemash» car-assembly plant. He also entered the
newly established Department of Mechanics at the Frunze Polytechnics
Institute, but after less than a year spent as an external
student, he left the Institute and set himself a new goal.
In 1962 Askar Akaev entered the Leningrad Institute of Precise
Mechanics and Optics (LITMO). When he was a second-year student
he won the first-degree diploma at a regional contest of research
papers. For his academic success he was awarded with a holiday
trip to Hungary.
Apparently, it was not all plain sailing in the
beginning Askar experienced certain difficulties in Leningrad. While
he had good communication skills in Russian he could not
accurately express scientific and technical ideas in this language.
But thanks to his persistence and determination he learned excellent
Russian by the end of his first year. According to his
fellow students from Kyrgyzstan of whom there were more than 150 in Leningrad,
Askar even arranged Russian language classes where he trained students
from remote areas of Kyrgyzstan.
But it wasn«t all work he was a member
of the combined volleyball team of his Institute and he took
part in athletics. (Even as President he still regularly
jogs). He was also fond of ballroom dancing and in collecting
records and reproductions. There is a story that once he drew
a portrait of his fellow student and gave it to her
a few years later she got married and moved to Hungary. In 1996 the
portrait was brought to Bishkek and sold at auction where it attracted
quite a high price.
Graduating in 1967 as an Engineer-Mathematician he continued
his post-graduate studies in Leningrad and began publishing several
papers and books in the field of Optics to date
he has over 110 scientific works to his name.
Akaev«s public and political career, as he said
himself, started in 1986 when he was elected as a member
of the Central committee of the Communist party of the
Kyrgyz SSR, later as a peoples deputy of the
Kyrgyz SSR and then in 1989 as a deputy of the Supreme
Council of the USSR.
His statements at congresses and sessions immediately attracted
attention and a reputation as a person of a broad
vision, who thinks independently and trusts only a strict scientific
statistics raised various social problems of the entire
USSR: the youth and pensioners, tobacco growers and livestock farmers,
the problems of public health and education, and many others. He supported
abolition of the 6-th article of the USSR Constitution,
i. e. separation of the Communist party from the government; he supported
adoption of the law on land and private property that for the
first time in history of Soviet power, envisaged an advent
of market mechanisms.
Askar Akaev met his future wife, Mairam in 1969 in Leningrad
at a party of students from Kyrgyzstan. This is what
he said about this. «It was a coincidence or may
be a natural thing. They announced a dancing contest. I liked
to waltz very much and could dance it quite well. I asked
Mairam to dance with me and
. we won the first prize.»
They got married in 1970.
In his leisure time, of which Askar Akaev does not have too
much, he likes going to the mountains. He also goes mountain
skiing in winter. He enjoys classical music: Verdi and Vivaldi,
Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Mozart, Brahms and Chopin.
Mairam Akaeva is a specialist in theory of mechanisms
and machines. She is the author of more than 30 scientific
works and is an honorary professor of the Beijing University
of Telecommunications, the International Engineering Academy (Moscow),
Kyrgyz-Uzbek University, the Issyk-Kul State University, and the Bishkek
University of Humanities. She is a chairperson of the
Meerim charitable fund for support of childhood and maternity. The
fund is mainly focused support of orphans and children from
unprivileged families, as well as moral and aesthetic education
of children.
The Akaevs have four children 2 sons and 2 daughters.
In the disputed elections for the new post of President of the
Kyrgyz SSR Askar Akaev emerged as a compromise candidate
and was elected. During the abortive Moscow coup of August 1991 he came
out strongly against the conspirators appearing on television and
announcing to the people what was happening. He resigned from
the Communist Party that was soon afterwards dissolved. On August
31st the Kyrgyz Supreme Soviet voted top declare Kyrgyzstan«s independence
the first Central Asian Republic to do so. Six weeks later
he was re-elected President, having turned down an invitation
from Michail Gorbachov to become Vice President of the USSR.
He established a reputation as a democrat and reformer
and a huge majority in a referendum backed his reforms
in 1994. He was re-elected President in 1996 and
2000 with overwhelming majorities.
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