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Capital Bishkek, one of the youngest capitals of the former Soviet Union, is now the capital of the Kyrgyz Republic. Situated in the north, in the valley of the Chu river, the only large city of Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek enjoys a good climate during both the summer and winter seasons.Originally, Bishkek was called Pishpek. In 1926, Pishpek became the capital of the Kirghiz Autonomous Republic. In 1936, as the capital of the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic, Pishpek was renamed Frunze in honor of a major political organizer of the Civil War era called Mikhail Frunze (1885-1925) who was born in Pishpek in the Moldavian family. A statue of Frunze, riding a horse, is installed at the end of Erkindik Prospekt, near the train station; the Mikhail Frunze Memorial House Museum serves as a shrine to the Red Army hero. In 1991, Frunze was renamed to Bishkek. Many public parks, restaurants, museums, and cinemas dot the map of the city. Among the major places of interest are: the History Museum, the Fine Arts Museum. Specializing in Kyrgyz culture, the museums display the life history of the Kyrgyz from their nomadic days when the yurt and the tunduk were common terms to contributions of the Kyrgyz, men and women, to the war effort in the 1940's. The struggle of the Kyrgyz for independence that followed glasnost' and perestroika is understood best in the context of their 1000th anniversary of Manas. The residents of Bishkek rehearsed this major event for at least two years, wearing native clothes, displaying life in the yurt, and dancing to national tunes. Indeed, in 1995, the Kyrgyz government built a whole village (Manas Village) to demonstrate the historical significance of the efforts of Manas and his forty warrior companions (kirkchoro) in uniting all Kyrgyz tribes and in preserving the integrity of the Kyrgyz culture. The Victory (Pobedy) Monument constitutes yet another site in Bishkek that must not be overlooked. The 1985 monument consists of three curved spires of granite outlining a yurt. The yurt, the moveable home of the Kyrgyz nomad, has forty frame posts which converge, like spikes on a wheel, at the top, leaving an opening or tunduk for the sun to shine in. The coming together of the frame posts at the tunduk symbolizes family unity. Any pole missing symbolizes a loss in the family. Using this potent symbol of Kyrgyz culture, the Soviet artist recalls the losses of the Union to Nazi Germany. The eternal flame on which the "yurt" stands, the actual hearth of the yurt, accentuates the distress of a Kyrgyz woman depicted waiting for a loved one to return from the war. Walking down the streets of Bishkek and talking to the Kyrgyz, many names are mentioned that are not at all familiar to the Westerners' ears. The most celebrated among those names are the names of Manas and Togtogul Satilganov. The statue of the former, the founder of the Kyrgyz nation, graces the square in front of the Kyrgyz State Philharmonic while the statue of the latter graces the yard of the Opera and Ballet Theater. The epic Manas, of which Manas is the main character, was first written down by Chokan Valikhanov, a Kazakh. Valikhanov's account was based on the information that he had received from the manaschis or reciters of the epic who had inherited it from their ancestors in a celebrated chain of oral transmission. Both the life of Manas and the lives of the Manaschis or bards who recite the heroic deeds of Manas are celebrated in the complex in the center of the city. The statue of Manas (completed in 1981) is placed against the backdrop of the white marble of the monumental Philharmonic building. It depicts Manas, Kyrgyzstan's legendary hero, while riding his magic steed, Ak-Kula, and slaying a dragon. Below, to his right is his wife and counselor, Kanykei, dressed in national Kyrgyz dress worn by some married women of Kyrgyzstan even today. To his left is his advisor, the sage Bakai, also in traditional Kyrgyz clothing. The Manaschis are depicted as they would sit in the yurt and recite the deeds of the founder of the Kyrgyz nation. The Kyrgyz White House is located on Chuy Avenue between the Philharmonic building and the Central Square. Built in 1985 as the Headquarters of the Communist Party's Central Committee, the White House accommodates the President's office. Counterbalancing Manas on Chuy Avenue is the Ala-Too Square. In the square, against the impressive building of the Historical Museum, stands the statue of Liberty. Before it was the place of statue of Lenin but in 2003 it was removed to the back of Historical Museum. The Kyrgyz speak both Russian (official language) and Kyrgyz (state language). They are predominantly Sunni Muslims of the Hanafi sect. The capital, however, is not as much oriented toward religion as is the town of Osh to its southwest. Away from the Ferghana Valley, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan, the inhabitants of the capital attend to their religious and secular concerns as they see fit. The Bishkek Mosque, built in 1886, is one of the oldest structures erected in Bishkek. In recent years, the mosque has been renovated to meet the needs of the faithful as they return to the fold.
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