The Crimean War was taken as a signal for the highlanders as well. The sultan, in whom they had pinned their hopes for so long, had failed to crush the Russians, even though he was allied with the armies of England and France. In the Caucasus, the Russian capitulation and the humiliating conditions of the Treaty of Paris, which barred warships from the Black Sea, were seen as a victory for the tsar, since he had survived the onslaught of three sovereigns without capture.
A delegation of Chechens wrote to Shamil in 1856 asking him to sue for peace. Shamil, perhaps sharing their opinion, made no immediate reply. He must have sensed this was no time for a theatrical response, for fasting and flagellation. He asked only for a couple of months for the smoke to clear.
The end was near, but Russian overconfidence and instinctive brutality saved him for a while. A council in Stavropol decided that, to pacify the Caucasus, tribesmen who submitted must be moved to Manych â some vacant land on the plains to the north of the Caucasus. The effect on those who had not submitted was predictable enough. They would never willingly surrender their homeland, so all thoughts of suing for peace were forgotten, and the war went on.
âI could never invent such punishment for those Chechens who had betrayed us as their Russian masters did,' Shamil told the Chechen delegation. âDo you want to go to Manych as well?'
But it was only a temporary reprieve. The Russians might have been politically inept, but they were militarily competent at last. The command had been reorganized along rational lines, and a steady pressure was exerted to squeeze Shamil's control of his heartland. The forests were felled in great strips either side of the roads, and new forts were built, meaning the highlanders could not even bring the Russians to fight any more. This new tactic proved more effective than any number of battles had been.
âThe mountaineers could not be frightened by fighting. Constant warfare had given them such confidence, that a few score men would engage without fear a column several battalions strong, and returning one shot to our hundred would occasion us much more loss than we them. Fighting underlines equality between forces, and as long as the mountaineers could fight, they entertained no thought of submission, ' said Prince Alexander Baryatinsky, the new and gifted commander of the Russian forces.
âBut when, time after time, they found that they were not even given a chance to resist, their weapons started to fall from their hands. Defeated, they would have gathered again on the morrow. Circumvented and forced to disperse without fighting, while seeing their valleys occupied without opposition, they came in next day to offer their submission. Shamil's power was undermined by nothing so much as the gathering of useless hordes which had to disperse to their homes without anywhere offering serious resistance.'
In one last desperate roll of the dice, Shamil struck out of Chechnya towards Vladikavkaz, where the Ingush were revolting. Apparently he believed that Musa Kundukhov, a Muslim general in the Russian service whom we will hear of again, had promised him his cooperation. Nothing came of it, and by the end of 1858 Shamil had not only lost his son, but the best part of his territory.
The final assault came in July 1859. Russia's troops manoeuvred around the defences Shamil had set up, forcing the waiting army to disperse, and the last shreds of morale left with it. In a final indignity, Shamil's wagons and treasury were robbed by his former subjects, and he was abused and insulted as he headed for his last stronghold: the mountaintop village of Gunib.
Shamil despaired, and recited a poem as he rode to his last battle.
âI swore by my brothers, whom I considered my coats of armour, but they were armour only for my enemies. I considered them well-aimed arrows, but they were aimed only at my heart. They said “we have pure hearts” and they spoke the truth, but only of my love.'
As his miserable party laboured along the last stretch of road, he turned to his son-in-law and later chronicler Abdurakhman and asked him: âIf meat spoils, we treat it with salt. But what can we do if the salt spoils?'
Gunib, however, was a wonderful place to make a last stand. It is a natural fortress that, if only the defenders had enough men, could surely never be captured. It is ringed by cliffs, which rise sheer all around a bowl-shaped plateau. The plateau has fields, a stream, houses and trees, and its only exit is guarded by high walls, pierced by a single gate.
Now there is a prosperous village at the foot of the cliffs, but in Shamil's time the defenders were ensconced on the plateau, too far from the Russians to be harmed by artillery, and secure in the knowledge that they were impregnable.
Or, they would have been, if only there had been more of them. Shamil had commanded thousands just weeks before; now there were only 400 defenders, and even they were wavering in their loyalty.
The Russians wanted to take their enemy alive. They posted rewards for him in case he tried to flee, and held peace negotiations for two weeks, but that came to nothing.
According to one account, Shamil's envoys were sent with the message that the imam was prepared to surrender, if he was allowed to make the pilgrimage to the holy places with his family. âIf you release me, my family and my followers on the Haj, then between us will be peace and agreement. If not, then the sword is unsheathed and the hand is strong,' the imam's message said. The Russians' reply did not satisfy him, however, so the battle was on.
Before dawn on 6 September, the highlanders began to hear the Russian soldiers cheer as they made their advance. Some of Shamil's followers threw stones down the cliffs, hoping to knock out their assailants, but the resistance was hopeless in the dark. The Russians
were swarming up the cliffs all around the village. The thin screen of defenders might be able to hold them for a while, but even the smallest toehold on the plateau would allow the Russians to push soldiers up the cliffs, and would leave the last few hundred people loyal to the imam outnumbered and outgunned.
Abdurakhman feared for his family and rushed back to the houses where they had been staying. âWhen I got to where our families were, I found them in the house by the mosque. They looked like baby swallows held in the hand. They were crying from the horrors of the day.'
The defenders, having lost their hold on the clifftops, retreated down the slight slope towards the last pocket of resistance. Russians now held the heights, which dominate the bowl of the plateau from all sides, and poured fire down into the throng.
A Russian emissary called out to the last men left fighting: âSave your ammunition, do not bring death upon yourselves. Do not spill your blood. Save your honour.'
The highlanders stopped firing and listened: was this the end? Some looked to the imam for a decision, but found no comfort. âThey did not speak to him about it, being afraid of the shame. As it is said, fire is better than shame. And the imam was quiet, saying nothing; he was fully determined to die and to fight until his sword was broken to pieces,' Abdurakhman recalled.
Shamil begged his followers to kill him: âIs there no one among you who would kill me? I allow you to spill my blood, so the enemy does not see me.'
But they refused. Shamil then gave them permission to leave, and said he would die alone. Again, they refused. His son Gazi-Muhammad knelt before him and begged him to surrender: once, twice. On the third time the imam gave in. He could resist his son's entreaties no longer: the father's love had overcome the fanatic's zeal.
Accompanied by twelve of his followers, he rode towards the Russians â âhe looked not to the right, not to the left, only at the horse's mane' â and gave himself up. Ahead of him, seated on a small rock, was Baryatinsky. He welcomed the imam into captivity, and Shamil unbuckled his sword and handed it to his conqueror. Shamil's war was over.
Apollon Runovsky, meanwhile, was busy running his hospital in Khasavyurt, the job he received when he was allowed back into the army after his temporary disgrace. It must have been a relief for him to have any kind of job at all, and perhaps he felt he would be in the posting until the end of his career. If he did, however, he could not have been more wrong.
A new posting was on its way, and one that surely he did not expect. He was to live with Shamil.
âLive with Shamil! Take care of him! How could I ever have imagined such a thing? On the contrary, I well remember how during my long period of service in the Caucasus, I more than once thought that Shamil would be taking care of me, if the fortunes of war had left me as his prisoner,' Runovsky wrote.
As Shamil's
pristav
â the word means policeman or bailiff, but in this case he was more like an aide-de-camp â he was ordered to help the imam, while simultaneously keeping him under control. He had to watch him permanently, but without being intrusive. He could not interfere in Shamil's religious or family life, but must keep a diary of sayings, comments, conversations and events.
Shamil was to be honoured and feted as a worthy adversary, with Runovsky supplying his wants. It could have been a tough job for the hospital administrator, since no one knew if Shamil would turn out to be a savage, twisted by anger. But it did not turn out that way. The imam appreciated this rare display of magnanimity from the Russians â one that would never be repeated â and he came to love his captors as his son had done.
âWhen I decided to obey the wishes of my wives and children and surrender,' Shamil told Runovsky many months later, âand when I walked to the meeting with your commander, I was convinced I would hear from him the words: “Well, pig, where's your sword that you suggested I should come and take from you?” The expectation of this meeting was so upsetting that I fully believed myself worthy of this insult, and decided that I would stab myself as soon as I heard it. But when the words of the commander were translated for me, and had only a friendly meaning, I at first did not believe my ears, and, not expecting anything like that, I could not give an answer, and
when I spoke, I made so many mistakes that it seems I did not speak very well at all.'
Runovsky's diaries give a sometimes daily, sometimes weekly, sometimes monthly but always fascinating account of the imam's existence. They are the completest study of his character that we have, and illuminate this guerrilla warrior in unexpected and wonderful ways.
In one series of consecutive entries, for example, in February 1861, Shamil told Runovsky about highlanders who were in Russian service, then about the mountain beliefs concerning snakes, then about why boys and girls are born at different times (girls are conceived if the mother is well-fed, apparently), then about who in the mountains is best able to treat a scorpion sting. Elsewhere, Shamil discussed the laws he imposed, which of his lieutenants were most loyal, the appalling sexual habits of the Turks, and more.
Shamil, on his surrender, had been taken with his wives and children down to the plains. After a short rest, Shamil, his sons Gazi-Muhammad and Muhammad-Sheffi, and the follower called Hajio were separated from the others, and sent north into Russia.
According to a family anecdote related to me by one of his descendants, after a few days of rattling through the uninterrupted steppe, Shamil commented: âIf I had known Russia was so big, I would never have fought against it.' True or not, the remark is entirely in keeping with the imam's outlook on life, which turned out to be startlingly naive.
At times, I had to keep reminding myself that the man described in the hundreds of pages of diaries and recollections had resisted the mighty Russian army for two and a half decades. He seemed like someone who had never encountered the modern world before.
If Shamil feared the reaction of the Russians to his presence, he was again mistaken. He was greeted by cheering crowds at every stop he made on his journey and, on arrival in St Petersburg, he became a sensation. Giant throngs gathered outside his hotel, hoping for just a glimpse of his face, or outside buildings where he stopped as he was conducted around the city. He was amazed by all he saw, and particularly by the warmth of his welcome.
âYour people are very good to me in captivity; they are not angry with me, and do not wish me evil. This is very good, and it was not like this in my place. Our lads would throw rubbish at the prisoner and, if they could, they would even have killed him,' he told his translator.
The warm sentiment was one he felt for Emperor Alexander II as well. The tsar's father had cared for Shamil's son, and now it was the son's turn to treat Jamal-Edin's father with grace and generosity.
âNot only gratitude for your Majesty's magnanimity towards one who was your enemy, but also â I proclaim it again and again â a sincere and deliberate conviction compels me to be your subject. If there be a man upon earth worthy to represent God Almighty, that man, sire, is yourself. If a throne is grounded upon the hearts of men, that throne is yours. Sire, I wish it to be known everywhere, that if old Schamyl of Daghestan, who fought against your arms for thirty years, experiences a regret at the decline of his days, it is only that he cannot be born again to devote his whole life to the service of your empire,' the imam said, according to an account printed in the London
Times
in November 1859.
The compliments may have been expressed in the traditional forms of the Arabic-speaker, but they were clearly heartfelt. Imagine a captured Osama bin Laden expressing such gratitude to the American president, and you have some idea of the surprise that Shamil's words provoked in those who heard them.
And the Russians appreciated the dignity of their captive. Shamil's popularity was such that he appeared at times to possess the draw of an exotic specimen in a zoo, particularly for those officers who had fought against him, and finally had the chance to see their opponent in the flesh. Most of them were stunned by the gentleness of the man they saw in front of them, and the news of the dignity of his appearance made more officers desperate to see him.