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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
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Uzbekistan
Index
Unfortunately for the reformers and their efforts to reform the
language, following the national delimitation the Soviet government began
a deliberate policy of separating the Turkic languages from each other.
Each nationality was given a separate literary language. Often new
languages had to be invented where no such languages had existed before.
This was the case for Uzbek, which was declared to be a continuation of
Chaghatai and a descendant of all of the ancient Turkic languages spoken
in the region. In the initial stage of reform, in 1928-30, the Arabic
alphabet was abandoned in favor of the Latin alphabet. Then in 1940,
Cyrillic was made the official alphabet with the rationale that sharing
the Arabic alphabet with Turkey might lead to common literature and hence
a resumption of the Turkish threat to Russian control in the region.
Because of this artificial reform process, the ancient literature of the
region became inaccessible to all but specialists. Instead, the use of
Russian and Russian borrowings into Uzbek was strongly encouraged, and the
study of Russian became compulsory in all schools. The emphasis on the
study of Russian varied at various times in the Soviet period. At the
height of Stalinism (1930s and 1940s), and in the Brezhnev period
(1964-82), the study of Russian was strongly encouraged. Increasingly,
Russian became the language of higher education and advancement in
society, especially after Stalin orchestrated the Great Purge of 1937-38,
which uprooted much indigenous culture in the non-Slavic Soviet republics.
The language of the military was Russian as well. Those Uzbeks who did not
study in higher education establishments and had no desire to work for the
state did not make a great effort to study Russian. As a result, such
people found their social mobility stifled, and males who served in the
armed forces suffered discrimination and persecution because they could
not communicate with their superiors. This communication problem was one
of the reasons for disproportionate numbers of Uzbeks and other Central
Asians in the noncombat construction battalions of the Soviet army.
Data as of March 1996
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