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Exploring the land of fire

Home to the Jewish Red Village and Baku’s eccentric high-rises, discover the different sides of Azerbaijan

April 23, 2023 17:30
Zaha Hadid Baku
5 min read

Who would have thought that one of the world’s last surviving shtetls would be in Azerbaijan? In Guba, in the north-east of the country close to the Russian border, Qırmızı Qəsəbə is an exclusively Jewish town; also known as the Red Village, it’s the largest completely Jewish town outside Israel.

Mountain Jews have lived here for at least 2,600 years, although some believe they arrived 200 years earlier — 150 years before the destruction of Jerusalem and the First Temple by Nebuchadnezzar, the Babylonian king, in 586BCE.

Around 100 miles north of the capital Baku, the town was founded in 1742, with Jews settling here from different parts of Azerbaijan, as well as Iran, Turkey and Dagestan. Set on the south bank of the Gudialchai River, an arched bridge built in 1894 now connects it to the north bank, where the majority Azeri Muslims live in the main part of the city.

As the population grew, reaching 8,400 in 1916, the town once supported 13 synagogues, with Juuri, a Persian dialect also known as Judeo-Tat, as the main language.