August 25, 2004
Ukraine: Crimea's Tatars -- Mustafa Dzhemilev: Hero, Leader, Statesman (Part 3)
by Askold Krushelnycky
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For Crimean Tatars, deported from their homeland by Stalin but returning in large numbers for more than a decade, their most venerated leader is Mustafa Dzhemilev, who combines the roles of hero, political leader, and elder statesman. RFE/RL interviewed him in the Crimean capital, Simferopol, where Dzhemilev continues to battle for the rights of Crimean Tatars, a Turkic people who have inhabited the Black Sea peninsula for more than seven centuries.
Simferopol, Ukraine; 25 August 2004 (RFE/RL) -- Mustafa Dzhemilev is probably the most respected living figure for Crimean Tatars.
During the Soviet era, he become a hero for speaking out to keep the Crimean Tatar identity alive and to demand that his people -- deported en masse from their homeland by Soviet leader Josef Stalin in 1944 -- be allowed to return home. For those activities, he was twice imprisoned in the Gulag -- 15 years in all.
Now, in almost Biblical manner, Dzhemilev has led his people home. Some 250,000 Tatars have returned to Crimea from exile, mostly in Central Asian, since the late 1980s. But despite such progress, Dzhemilev warns that Russia is seeking to use the Tatar issue to destabilize Crimea, and that Ukrainian authorities aren't helping the matter by reneging on promises to assist the Tatars.