Heydar Aliyev's cult of personality, also known as Heydarism, became a significant part of Azerbaijani politics and society after he came to power in 1993 and continuing after his death in 2003, when his son Ilham Aliyev succeeded him. Aliyev, a former Soviet politburo member and the leader of Soviet Azerbaijan from 1969 to 1987, became the President of Azerbaijan in 1993. He then began to carefully design an autocratic system, with heavy reliance on family and clan members, oil revenues and patronage. In Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev is presented as "Father of the Azeri nation".
Heydar Aliyev's image in Azerbaijan
Aliyev has long been accused of violating human rights and forming an autocratic system in Azerbaijan, with many critics even characterizing the regime as totalitarian. His personality cult has been compared to those in the Soviet Union, characterized by an atmosphere of fear in Azerbaijan and censorship of the press. This continued following his death. According to Azeri analyst Zafar Guliyev, the 2003 appointment of Ilham Aliyev as his father's successor instigated a process of asserting the personality cult of his predecessor and rewriting recent Azerbaijani history. In his 2003 book The New Great Game: Blood and Oil in Central Asia, German journalist Lutz Kleveman described the situation: Opposition analyst Zardusht Alizade has said that Aliyev "was the last representative of the political heritage of Stalin and Beria. personified the most terrible experiences in the fate of the Azerbaijani people." The 2006 US Congressional Record Proceedings and Debates also expressed concern about how Ilham Aliyev's government maintains a "distinct Soviet-era state television network and has elevated Heydar Aliyev to the status of a minor personality cult figure." American journalist and specialist on the Caucasus, Thomas Goltz wrote in 1998: Julie Hill described the cult in her 2005 book, The Silk Road revisited: markets, merchants and minarets, as follows:
Heydar Aliyev's reaction
In 2001, when journalists from CIS countries asked Heydar Aliyev about his cult of personality, he responded:
Places named after Heydar Aliyev
Every city and town in Azerbaijan has a street named after Heydar Aliyev, including one of the central avenues of capital Baku. According to official information, there are 60 museums and centers of Heydar Aliyev in Azerbaijan. Other places named after him include:
Baku International Airport was named after Heydar Aliyev on March 10, 2004.
Annually, since 2000, a festival is held in Baku in honor of Heydar Aliyev, called Gül bayramı, which translates to "Flower Feast". It starts on May 10 and lasts a few days. Traditionally, it is held in Heydar Aliyev Park, in front of the Central Bank of Azerbaijan, where unique flowers from around the world are gathered. According to the opposition Yeni Musavat newspaper, over $76 million were spent in 2013 on this festival.
In Azerbaijan, almost every major city has at least one monument of Heydar Aliyev. With his death in 2003, many more were erected in Azerbaijan, other countries, especially in Post-Soviet states. In the capital Baku, there are at least three statues of Aliyev father: in the Heydar Aliyev International Airport, in the Alley of Honor and in Heydar Aliyev Park on Rashid Behbudov Street. Settlements in Azerbaijan with statues and monuments of Heydar Aliyev include:
Ağcabədi
Ağdaş
Agsu
Astara
Biləsuvar
Cəlilabad
Daşkəsən
Ganja
Goranboy
Horadiz
İmişli
İvanovka
Lankaran
Lerik
Masallı
Naftalan
Nəbiağalı
Nakhichevan City
Oğuz
Qabala
Qazax
Qax
Qıvraq
Qobustan
Quba
Qusar
Quzanlı
Saatlı
Sabirabad
Salyan
Şabran
Şamaxı
Şəki
Şəmkir
Shirvan
Siyəzən
Sumqayit
Tovuz
Ucar
Xaçmaz
Xızı
Xırdalan
Yardımlı
Outside of Azerbaijan
Since Aliyev's death in 2003, many statues have been erected outside of Azerbaijan as well. The first statue of Aliyev outside Azerbaijan was inaugurated in Kiev. In the same year Aliyev's bust was inaugurated in Bucharest, in a park named after him in 2007. Later statues were erected in Comrat, Gagauzia, Moldova, Tbilisi Qalyub, a suburb of Cairo Belgrade's Tašmajdan Park and Mexico City. However, the latter was removed in 2013 after significant controversy. In only two years, three statues of Aliyev were erected in Russia: in Ulyanovsk, :ru:Джемикент|Dzhemikent village, Derbentsky District, Dagestan and Astrakhan. Also, statues of Aliyev were installed in three Turkish cities: Kars, Ankara, and Istanbul's Haydar Aliyev Park. A bust of Aliyev was inaugurated in Tashkent, Uzbekistan in 2018.