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"No matter how well you do on your exams, we will not accept you."
When I asked why, Shtrakhov said nothing. I had to answer the ques-tion myself: "I understand why you don't want to admit me to the school of
history; it's because I'm a Crimean Tatar?"
"And where do I belong," I asked her. "In Moscow I am a foreigner, and in Uzbekistan I am a foreigner. Tell me, where do I belong?" In a word, I was not accepted in Tashkent."
Chin degenin ne eken o kelishtirsen,
Chindan chekman tikermen, erishtirsen.
What is a chin, if you know how to put it together, If you make me mad, I'll sew a shepherd's jacket out of chin.
Over the course of two centuries, this number
must have grown to more than five million. The estimate of the khanate's population is based on the statement of Baron de Tott, who accompanied the Khan Kirim Giray (r. 1758-64,1768-69) as an adviser during the 1768-69 Russo-Tatar War. He states that three horsemen were demanded from every eight families for the campaign and that a total of 200,000 men were recruited in 1768. Presuming four people per family, the calculation adds up to two million.
Activists believe that the population of emigre Tatar communities is far greater than that of the parent group itself. This belief derives from the
estimates of the Crimean Khanate's population and the subsequent out-migrations.! Whether or not this statement is accurate, it reflects the self-image of emigre Tatars.