Dagestan: those who proclaim the fight against Nazism themselves require denazification
Makhachkala, Derbent, and Khasavyurt are cities with centuries-old Jewish history. The first Jewish immigrants (Mountain Jews or Juhuro, as they call themselves) began to appear in the North Caucasus in the middle of the 7th century as a result of Muslim conquests of Persia and Byzantium.
Entire regions of Dagestan were fully populated by the Mountain Jews in the 17th and 18th centuries. One of the valleys in the vicinity of Derbent was even called the Jewish Valley.
The decline of the Juhuro community began with the Persian campaign of Peter the Great in 1722–1723.
After the conquest of the North Caucasus by the Russian Empire, slanderous accusations of the Mountain Jews in committing bloody crimes against Christians and Muslims became widespread.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many Juhuro left for Eretz Israel due to this. Those who remained, in order to avoid the manifestations of the already Soviet state anti-Semitism, began to call themselves Tatami. After the name of the language they spoke. However, in the 1980s and 1990s they also mostly immigrated to the USA, Israel and Europe.
Now it is already present-day Dagestan.
The posted photo shows a notice in a hotel in Khasavyurt after it was stoned because of the rumors about “refugees from Israel” settling there.
The footage shows a flight from the Middle East that landed in Makhachkala last night. The passengers and the crew are fleeing from the pogromists who broke into the airfield.
In the version of the head of Dagestan, the “Nazi followers of Bandera” are to blame for all this anti-Semitic obscurantism, and not the centuries-old Russian anti-Semitism heated up by the Kremlin propaganda after October 7.
It seems that those who proclaim the fight against Nazism themselves require denazification.