Known as the land of the mountains, Dagestan lies immediately north of
the Caucasus Mountains, and stretches for approximately 250 miles along
the west shore of the Caspian Sea. With its mountainous terrain making
travel and communication difficult, Daghestan is still largely tribal.
Despite over a century of Tsarist control followed by seventy years of
repressive Soviet rule, there are still 32 distinct ethnic groups in
Daghestan, each with its own language, making it unquestionably the most
complex of the Caucasian republics. Shamanic practices are still
prevalent in this country, where one of the ten lost tribes of Israel
can be found, and in which the stories of the elders provide the people
with evidence of who their ancient ancestors were and where their roots
lie. In Daghestan, as in the neighbouring countries of Georgia,
Chechnya, and Azerbaijan, these roots lie in shamanism. This book, one
of only a handful available in English on the country, contains the
texts of some of these stories as well as commentaries on them.