- Kist people
ethnic group
group=Kists
ქისტები
poptime= 7,110 (2002 census)
popplace=Khevsureti ,Tusheti andKakheti (Georgia)
rels=Sunni Islam
langs=Chechen
related=Chechens, Ingushs, and BatsThe Kists ( _ka. ქისტები) are a Nakh-speaking
ethnic group in Georgia related to the Chechen and Ingush peoples. They primarily live inPankisi Gorge of theeastern Georgia n region ofKakheti where their total number is approximate to 5,000 people.Origins
*10,000-8,000 BC migration of proto-Kist people to the slopes of the Caucasus from the
Fertile Crescent domestication of animals, and irrigation are used.cite journal |author=Bernice Wuethrich |year=2000 |month=19 May |title=Peering Into the Past, With Words |journal=Science |volume=288 |issue=5469 |pages=1158 |url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/288/5469/1158 |doi=10.1126/science.288.5469.1158] The Kist people's origins can be traced back to their ancestral land in lowerChechnya . In the 1830s and 1870s they have migrated to the eastern GeorgianPankisi Gorge and some adjoining lands of the provinces ofTusheti andKakheti . Named "Kists" (ქისტები) in Georgian, they are closely related culturally, linguistically and ethnically to other Nakh-speaking peoples such as Ingushs and Chechens, but their customs and traditions share many similarities also with the eastern Georgian mountaineers.Around the same region of Georgia, there is also a related but still different community of
North Caucasian origin called Bats.Geographic distribution
Currently there are six Kist villages in Pankisi:
Duisi , Dzibakhevi,Jokolo , Shua Khalatsani, Omalo, and Birkiani. The Kist community remains quite small and are scattered across northeast Georgia, but in the past decade the number of residents in the Pankisi area has at least doubled due to an influx of refugees from the neighboringChechnya .Relationships between the local
Ossetians and Georgians and between the Kists and Ossetians have become tense, but remains largely peaceful as of today. The Ossetian inhabitants are sympathetic to the Chechen refugees, whom they see as protecting them against oppression by the Kists. The Ossetians feel pressured by the Kists and have been leaving their villages in the Pankisi Gorge to resettle inNorthern Ossetia . Because they often cannot sell their properties, they leave behind cultivated lands and houses built over many generations. Kists and Chechen refugees have settled in these abandoned houses. In this manner, the Ossetian villages of Dumasturi, Kvemo Khalatsani, and Tsinubani were vacated from 1998 to 2002.History
The early history of the Kist people is not well known and there are few sources mentioning their traditions, culture and history. The only historical sources available about the ethnic Kists in the area of Pankisi are found in the Georgian press, dated in the 1880s by E.Gugushvili, Zakaria Gulisashvili, Ivane Bukurauli, and Mate Albutashvili (ethnic Kist).
One of the greatest Georgian poets
Vazha-Pshavela dedicated his epic "Aluda Ketelauri " and "The Host and the Guest " to the story of Kist-Khevsur conflict which occurred in the 18th and 19th centuries. Based on religious and cultural difference, both Caucasian nations were engaged in fierce fighting. Vazha-Pshavela celebrates heroism of both nations and underlines the nonsense of their conflict.During the
Second Chechen War , the Kists gave shelter about 7,000 refugees fromChechnya . Some of them have crossed the mountainous passes to join their brethren in their struggle for independence, leading to the in the early 2000s.Religion
Majority of Kists are
Sunni Muslim, However, there are still remaining small pockets ofChristian Kists in Pankisi, Tusheti and Kakheti. To this day, the Kists worship theKhevsur sacred places ("jvari") and make sacrifices to the Anatori jvari near the Khevsureti village ofShatili , which is located at the Georgian-Chechnyan border. The Anatori jvari was also considered sacred by Chechens inMaisti andMelkhisti . Highlanders from both the northern Caucasus and Georgia participated together in religious celebrations. Although today the Kists pray in themosque in the village ofDuisi , they also pray at the sites of old, now-ruined Christian sanctuaries. They also pray inSaint George church in the village of Joqolo and attend the religious celebrationAlaverdoba in the Alaverdi Monastery of Kakheti. Finally, the Kists celebrate also Tetri Giorgoba, a local variation ofSt George's Day .Traditions
The Kists remained faithful to their family traditions and customs, refusing toassimilate with other north Caucasian nationalities such as the Chechens and Ingush. To this day, they identify themselves as Kists, and for official purposes declare themselves of Georgian nationality. They are typically bilingual in Chechen and Georgian.
The Kists represent the majority of the population in all Kist villages of the Pankisi Gorge, with the exception of a few Georgian families who came to this area later. In the Northern Caucasus, the Chechens and to a certain extent the Ingush officially registered father's names as family names. The Kists did not follow this practice. Instead, after migrating to Georgia, the Kists started adding the Georgian endings to their patrimonial names, particularly suffix -"shvili" (meaning "child" in Georgian), or sometimes suffix -"dze" (which means "son" in Georgian), or still other times the Georgian suffix -"uli" (indicating "belonging to" or "descended from"). In this manner, Kist family names were established.
A family's guest was treated with great respect. Men, usually the eldest man of the family, would greet the guest. The guest would then be seated in the most honorable place. The guest was not simply the guest of one particular family, but of the whole village and, in some cases, the whole canyon. Even today, this tradition is strictly maintained.
See also
*
Vainakh External links
* [http://repositories.cdlib.org/iseees/bps/2002_03-kurt/ Georgia's Pankisi Gorge: An Ethnographic Survey]
* [http://www.geotimes.ge/index.php?m=home&newsid=9724 Ethnic Groups in Georgia #5 - Kists] . "The Georgian Times".April 11 ,2008 .
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