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AZERBAIJANI SCHOLARS’ LETTER TO ETHNOLOGUE
Mr Raymond
G. Gordon,
Editor,
Ethnologue
c/o
International
Linguistics
Center
7500 West Camp
Wisdom Road
Dallas,
Texas
75236
USA
Dear Mr
Gordon:
As a group
of Iranian and Azerbaijani scholars and human rights activists,
we the undersigned would like to express our deepest gratitude
to you and all the individuals involved in publishing and
maintaining Ethnologue, the most objective and scholarly body of
knowledge on world languages.
In recent
months we have learned of some dubious attempts to pressure the
editors of Ethnologue into reducing the number of
Iran’s Azerbaijani-Turkic
population (also known as Azeri, Azerbaijani, Turk, and Turkish)
registered in Ethnologue’s current edition. Needless to say, we
are deeply concerned and saddened by such attempts. In our
capacity as scholars, academics, and human rights activists, we
would like to assure you that Ethnologue’s current estimation
(Web Edition, 2005) of Iran’s Azerbaijani and Turkic
speaking populations is a most objective estimation that closely
corresponds to the facts on the ground. We hope that the editors
and researchers of Ethnologue will not cave in to various
Persian ultranationalists’ propaganda, and will not allow
Ethnologue’s scholarly reputation to be tarnished by
ideologically motivated misinformation. To this end, we would
like to bring the following to your attention:
1)
It is a well-known fact that in
Iran’s entire history, no kind
of census has taken place that would account for the country’s
population makeup based on ethnicity, nationality, and more
importantly, language. All existing figures and numbers in this
area are estimations based on unsubstantiated sources and
literature. As such, care must be taken that in estimating the
number of each ethnic community, the views of local community
leaders, scholars, and human rights activists are taken into
full account. In particular, an objective researcher must be
cognizant to the fact that, due to lack of respect for human
rights and the rights of minorities in Iran,
both ruling governments and many scholars of the dominant
Farsi-speaking group have always presented a distorted view
regarding the size and status of disenfranchised communities in
the country. Unfortunately, they still continue to do so.
2)
In current Iran,
even though the significant portion of the Azeri-Turkic
population is living in the provinces of Eastern Azerbaijan,
Western Azerbaijan, Ardabil
and Zanjan; the entire population is by no means limited to
these four provinces. These provinces are recent creations based
on dubious government measures and questionable administrative
purposes. While constituting the core of
Azerbaijan’s geography, they neither
correspond to historical Azeri lands nor do they reflect the
Azeri inhabited areas in current
Iran. In any kind of research
on Iran’s Azerbaijani population, it must be borne in mind that
the Azeri-Turks reside all over the country, from the current
Azerbaijani provinces in the north-west to eastern and central
Iran to provinces of Tehran, Khorasan, Markazi, Hamadan, Qazvin,
and so forth. Paying due attention to this important issue is
not only a matter of objectivity in social research; it is also
a matter of consideration for morality and ethics, particularly
in dealing with marginalized communities.
We are
confident that Ethnologue’s competent researchers will pay
attention to the above-mentioned factors and, as always, will
present a most objective estimation of Iran’s Azerbaijani and Turkic
populations in the upcoming edition of Ethnologue. Please do not
hesitate to contact us for further information or any kind of
assistance. We will be more than happy to provide your
researchers with relevant historical and contemporary literature
on the subject.
Respectfully,
A group of
Iranian and Azerbaijani scholars and human rights activists
Signatories
are listed in alphabetical order, along with their academic
background and current affiliation.
Dr Seyed Zia Sadr
al Ashrafi
Sociologist;
Azerbaijani member of Congress of Nationalities for Federal Iran
Sedigheh
Adalati
Ph. D.
Sociologist
Alireza
Ardabili
Journalist
and Publisher
Dr Alireza
Asgharzadeh
Sociologist,
York
University
Mehemmed
Azadgar
Writer and
human rights activist
Professor
Reza Baraheni
Iranian
novelist and poet, a former president of PEN Canada and retired
professor of Comparative Literature, University of Toronto,
Canada
Professor
Younes P. Benab
Professor of
Political Sciences at Strayer University,
Washington, D.C.
Ahmad Geybi
President, Association of Azerbaijanis in
Sydney, Australia
Dr Farhad
Ghaboussi
Physician Un
Konstanz
Dr Almas
Shoar Ghaffari
Member of
Societe Botanique Francais "citologiste"
Ali
Gharajelou
Ph. D.
Political Scientist
Seyfeddin
Hatamlooy
Writer and
publisher
Ismail
Jamili
Poet and
Artist
Lale
Javanshir
Writer and
Artist
Samad
Purmusavi
Architect
and Artist
Dr Shahriyar
Rahnamayan
Postdoctoral
Fellow, Simon
Fraser
University,
Vancouver, Canada
Hedayet
Soltanzadeh
Lawyer,
writer, human rights activist
Hadi
Sultan-Qurraie
Ph. D. Comparative
Lit.
Shahrouz Torfakh
Architect
Fakhteh Zamani
Research
Engineer; Director of Association for the Defence of Azerbaijani
Political Prisoners in Iran (ADAPP)
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