The Eurasian Triangle. Russia, the Caucasus and Japan, 1904-1945

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The Akashi Operations Ë 31


Fig. 2.13.Giorgi Dekanozishvili, his wife Henriette Frenois, and children Tinatin and Tariel (Paris,
beginning of the twentieth century).


The real governor of Batumi was not the ocial Russian governor but someone living


in one of its suburbs. His “word was obeyed as law”:


Orders will suddenly be issued that the workmen of such and such a factory must strike; the men
obey without a murmur, and any manager or employee who attempts to stop the movement is
assassinated.... It seemed incredible that in a town fortied like Batum, surrounded by batteries
bristling with guns and garrisoned by large bodies of troops, murder and outrage should be so
easy. No attempt was made to arrest the guilty, and in fact the word seemed to have been passed
that the revolutionists be left alone.⁴⁴

In the north of Batumi, in the Guria region of Georgia, people rejected any governmen-


tal authority, making instead “a practical experiment in peasant autonomy of a very


interesting nature.” The “Gurian Republic” impressed Lev Tolstoi, who commented


with admiration that the Gurians organized “life in such a manner that there should


be no need for any authority.” But unlike the pacist Tolstoi, the Gurians fought with


arms against interference in their aairs: “If they (the Russians) wish to restore the old


form of government, they must kill us to the last man; till then we shall go on resist-


44 Luigi Villari,Fire and Sword in the Caucasus(London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1906), 52, 53, 55.

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