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Ali
and Nino is a captivating tale, as evocative of the exotic desert
landscape as it is of the passion between two people pulled apart
by culture, religion and war. This beautifully structured novel
with simple but powerful language makes one feel poignantly the
tragedy and the triumph of love against all odds. The novel is set
in Baku, Azerbaijan, on the eve of World War I. Baku, a city on
the edge of the Caspian Sea, lies poised precariously between east
and west. Standing at the crossroads of Asia and Europe, Baku brings
together east and west, Muslim and Christian, tradition and modernity
- Ali and Nino. Ali Khan Shirvanshir, a Muslim schoolboy from a
proud, aristocratic family, has fallen in love with the beautiful
and enigmatic Nino Kipiani, a Christian girl with distinctly European
sensibilities. Friends since childhood, their love for each other
grows despite resistance from their families and their own divergent
cultural backgrounds. This powerful novel shows vividly how the
implacable forces of history bear down upon the human heart.
Azerbaijan and neighbouring Georgia played important
roles in antiquity. The fall of Constantinople to the Turks in 1453,
cut Georgia off from the rest of the western (Christian) world and
made it prey to constant invasions by Turks and Persians. In 1801,
Georgia accepted Russian rule willingly as protection from the Muslim
invaders. Both Azerbaijan and Georgia became Soviet republics in
the early 1920s. The love story of Ali and Nino unfolds against
the backdrop of this rancorous history of blood feuds and bloodshed,
of brutal carnages and massacres, conquests and oppression - a timeless
struggle for the dominance of one culture/religion over the other.
Said brilliantly describes the birth of a new Caucasus by setting
the characters in a brief, turbulent period in Azerbaijan's history.
The novel shows the struggle of various empires over the Caucasus
as Russians, Persians, Turks, British all appear in the story. However,
hardly anything is known about the author, not even his real name;
Kurban Said is a pseudonym. One conjectures that he was a Muslim,
and a Persian, who had escaped Soviet rule to Vienna where the book
was published in 1937. He wrote Ali and Nino in German. The book
has been resurrected, with a forward by Paul Theroux. In spite of
the time that has passed since the first publication of this book,
the author's acute understanding of the clash between east and west
makes it a timeless and timely book.
To be together, Ali and Nino must overcome blood feud and scandal,
attempt a daring horseback rescue, and travel from the bustling
street of oil-boom Baku, through starkly beautiful deserts and remote
mountain villages, to the opulent palace of Ali's uncle in neighbouring
Persia. Ultimately the lovers are drawn back to Baku, but when war
threatens their future, Ali is forced to choose between his loyalty
to the beliefs of his Asian ancestors and his profound devotion
to Nino. For Ali's friends, who are eager to fight in World War
I on the side of the Russian Czar, Turkey's declaration of war against
Russia changes things dramatically. In one amazing moment in the
book, a devout Shiite named Seyid Mustafa doesn't know whether to
tell Ali to support the Czar or the Turkish caliph, who is a Sunni.
Ali and Nino is filled with vivid scenes of traditional Muslim life
- including a poetry duel, a meddlesome eunuch and an ecstatic religious
procession. Much of the novel's charm comes from its vivid depictions
of traditional ways of life. One such scene occurs during the poetry
duel, before which "two valiant lords of song" hurl insults
at each other. "Your clothes stink of dung, your face is that
of a pig ... and for a little money you would compose a poem on
your own shame," says one. "You can't sell your talent
because you never had any," replies the other. "You live
off the crumbs that fall from the festive table of my genius".
In Iran, Ali realises that despite a cultural affinity,
he cannot live there - it is not the Caucasus. While the melodic
poetry of Middle Eastern rubayyats is the entertainment of choice
in Iran, in Baku a wild Caucasian dance is danced at parties. "No,
I was not made to display Ferdowsi's verses, Hafiz' sighs of love
and Sa'di's quotations," Ali thinks. "The fragrance of
the Persian roses had suddenly vanished, and instead the clear desert
air of Baku and faint scent of sea, sand and oil was around me."
Loyalty to this new
independent Azerbaijan is what divides Ali and his father - not
religion or tradition. For the father, who has always lived under
imperial rule and whose ancestors died leading soldiers of one empire,
a new Azerbaijan is simply too unfamiliar. He says to Ali before
leaving Baku for Iran: "I don't like our new flag, the noise
of the new state, or the smell of godlessness that hangs over the
town. I am an old man, Ali Khan. I can't stand all these new things.
You are young and brave, you must stay here. Azerbaijan will need
you."
Indeed, this is a great work of literature. Rarely
have I been so engrossed in a novel like this. It has all the elements
of greatness: well-developed characters, a vivid setting, a gripping
plot, and an examination of larger themes - all crammed into this
little-known, relatively compact work. It's really an incredible
book, one which, despite its age, seems quite capable of tackling
the issues we see in our own world.
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