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Title: Anarchism in Armenia
Author: Ryan Robert Mitchell
Date: 2009
Language: en
Topics: Armenia, history, nationalism
Source: Retrieved on 22nd November 2021 from https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/9781405198073.wbierp1657
Notes: Published in The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest.

Ryan Robert Mitchell

Anarchism in Armenia

Armenia has long been contested and subjugated by two regional and

competing powers, Russia and the Ottoman empire. The revolutionary

nationalist movement was formed in Armenia in the absence of any liberal

parliamentary movement that sought to represent Armenian interests. In

fact, after decades of alternate subjugation to Russian or Ottoman

power, the majority of Armenians trusted neither the bourgeoisie nor the

Armenian Church, who they saw as colluding with their oppressors. It is

in this environment that radical nationalist movements were formed in

Armenia.

The Hay Heghapokhakan Dashnaktsutiun or Armenian Revolutionary

Federation (most commonly known as either the Dashnaktsutiun or Dashnak

Party) was founded in Tbilisi in1890 as both an outgrowth of and

response to the sterile scientific socialism of the social democratic

Hunchak (Alarm Bell) Party that had been formed three years earlier in

Geneva, and was at that point Armenia’s sole political party.

Premised on the idea that socialism would be the best way to mobilize

the worker population who were horrified by Ottoman oppression and

massacres, the Dashnaktsutiun was a loose federation that attracted

socialist revolutionaries, national liberationists, and social

democrats. Lacking any ideological coherence, the party was defined by

the objective of liberation rather than ideology. Unlike the earlier

Hunchak Party, which defined national liberation as separate from social

liberation, the Dashnaks defined liberation in terms of a people rather

than territory. It was important, then, for the Dashnak Party to also

appeal to Muslim and Turkish people, both of whom they saw as being

oppressed by despotic Ottoman rulers.

Early in its founding, the Dashnak Party had a strong anarchist

contingent and its best known figure was Alexander Atabekian (1868–ca.

1940?). Atabekian extensively published Russian and Armenian language

publications as part of the Armenian expatriate anarchist communities of

Geneva, London, and Paris. In 1894, while in Paris working on his

medical degree, he began publishing the Armenian language anarchist

journal Hamayankh (Commune), which detailed the Ottoman massacres and

the Armenian resistance against them.

Beyond being a publisher, Atabekian would later serve as Peter

Kropotkin’s personal physician and was at the latter’s side when he died

in 1921. Atabekian’s own fate is unknown since there is no record of his

death or of his activities after 1921. It is likely that he perished in

the Soviet purging of political dissidents.

By the turn of the century, anarchist presence within the Dashnak Party

had effectively disappeared as the party became fractured and

increasingly authoritarian – something Atabekian had earlier expressed

concern about in the Hamayankh journal. Outside of anarchocommunist

activities in 1905 in industrial cities like Tbilisi, Kutaisi, and Baku,

any major anarchist presence in Armenia effectively ended in this era

due to increased tsarist (and later Soviet) repression and the

subsequent Ottoman genocide.

In an ironic turn of events, after Armenia gained independence from the

Soviet Union in 1991, the Dashnaktsutiun reformed as a right-wing

nationalist party supporting authoritarian post-independence regimes. In

2005 the new Dashnak Party was involved in the persecution of members of

the anarchist network Autonomous Action, which sought to expose

irregularities in the electoral process.

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REFERENCES AND SUGGESTED READINGS

Karapetian, G. (2007) Armenian History in Anarchist Perspective.

Available at http://azat.

wordpress.com/2007/02/07/the-anarchisthistoriography-of-armenian-people/#more-25

(accessed April 1, 2008).

Libaridian, G. J. (1996) Revolution and Liberation in the 1892 and 1907

Programs of the Dashnaktsutiun. In R. G. Suny (Ed.), Transcaucasia,

Nationalism and Social Change: Essays in the History of Armenia,

Azerbaijan and Georgia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Selbuz, C. (2006) Biography of Armenian Anarchist Alexander Atabekian.

Trans. Deniz Keskin. Abolishing the Borders From Below 25 (July).

Suny, R. G. (Ed.) (1996a) Transcaucasia, Nationalism and Social Change:

Essays in the History of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. Ann Arbor:

University of Michigan Press.

Suny, R. G. (1996b) Nationalism and Social Class in the Russian

Revolution: The Cases of Baku and Tiflis. In R. G. Suny (Ed.),

Transcaucasia, Nationalism and Social Change: Essays in the History of

Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan

Press.

Ter-Minassian, A. (1996) Nationalism and Socialism in the Armenian

Revolutionary Movement (1887–1912). In R. G. Suny (Ed.), Transcaucasia,

Nationalism and Social Change: Essays in the History of Armenia,

Azerbaijan and Georgia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.