106
events in the transition era that enforced the transition to speed. The most important
purpose of mine in that part is to display under what conditions and through which
developments, the People’s Republic was transformed to Soviet People’s Republic at
first; and then how it was transformed to Uzbekistan Soviet Socialist Republic as a
national state of an ethnic group, at the last stage.
In Bukhara, the monarchy was destroyed on 2 September 1920 and the
People’s Republic was declared on 8 October 1920. The government
was presided by
Fayzallah Khodzhaev who was the most active man of the new regime. He was the
president of the council of ministers, the prime minister, and minister of foreign
affairs. The head of state was at first Mirza Abd al Qadir Muhitdinov and then he
was replaced by Usman Khodzhaev. The other members of the cabinet comprised of
well-known Young Bukharan Jadids.
For instance, Qari Yuldash Pulatov was
minister of public education and worship, Mukammil ad-Din Makhdum was minister
justice, Ata Khodzhaev was minister of interior, Hasan Bay was minister of public
health and Mukhtar Khan was minister of finance and economy.
282
The most
efficient man inside the cabinet after Khodzhaev was Abdulrauf Fitrat. Fitrat was a
minister of education and he was the conductor of constructing
the national state
through his educational and cultural reforms; and of creating the identity of the
Bukharan Uzbek society. He was, in short, responsible for nation building of the new
People’s Republic. The Young Bukharans had nationalist tendencies and began
taking an opposing attitude against the Bolsheviks. They also began pursuing
nationalist policies through the reforms in education. For example, Abdulrauf Fitrat,
architect of
educational reforms in Bukhara, conducted the policy of nationalizing
the official language. Persian language, which was the official language of the state
282
Carrere D’Encausse, Hèlene, trans.,
Islam and the Russian Empire Reform and Revolution in
Central Asia
, (London: I.B.Tauris-Co Ltd, 1966), 167.
107
for centuries, was replaced with Uzbek language. This was an important revolution
in cultural life. The new reform was seen as the indication of the new regime’s
attempt to be “a People’s Government”, because Persian, the language of elite, was
abolished and Uzbek, the language of local people was replaced. This reform also
inspired the pan-Turkist ideas again. “The government’s most revolutionary measure
was to proclaim Uzbek as the state language. By eliminating Persian- which was not
only the official language of the emirate, but above all the language of the elite- and
replacing
it by Uzbek, the language of the people, the government was signaling
clearly its intention of being a people’s government and no longer that of a few
privileged groups; it was also facilitating social mobility”.
283
Fitrat, Bukharan
minister of education, also made a series of reforms in madrasah system and put the
modern education system into implementation in Bukhara.
He also organized the
Bukharan students to send to Germany for getting undergraduate education in
German universities.
284
Fitrat also planned to establish the first modern-European
styled university in Bukhara.
285
“This reform had a further significance: under its
impact the old pan-Turanian dream sprang to life again,
which had the merit of
making the theoretically independent state of Bukhara once more into an important
center of spiritual renewal for all Muslims in Russia who had not forgotten their
reformist aspirations.”
286
The new regime began facing problems both inside the country and outside,
especially from the Soviets. Inside the country, the Revolutionary Committee of
283
Ibid, 172.
284
Allworth, Edward et al.,
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