Pop quiz time!
Which Central Asian stan speaks Persian (not Turkic), was always settled (never nomadic) and prints poetry on its currency?

Now it’s the national poet
Welcome to Otherstan! Outlierstan! Tajikistan, the smallest and poorest but most ancient and complicated country in Central Asia. Welcome to our world of cluelessness before we landed in Dushanbe, the country’s capital.

Big flowers, big building, covered woman
Tajikistan is the little Stan that thinks big … really big … monumentally big. Big as in home to the largest library in Central Asia (since 2012), and the biggest museum (since 2013), and the biggest teahouse (since 2014).

towering over tall trees
Tajikistan is a country standing tall as its Pamir Mountains (“roof of the world”). Tall as the Rogun Dam (under construction), soon to be the highest dam in the world. Tall as the tallest flagpole in the Stans (too bad, Almaty).
In fact, Tajikistan is home to more biggest and tallest than we can remember ever encountering in one place. In the capital, more is always better. After all, why have a handful of statues in a parkway if you can fit 25 in?

Is more better?
And why not build the biggest theater in Central Asia just because you have few theater-goers?

In Tajikistan, even highway truck stops on remote mountain roads are grand/iose.

Tajikistan would stand out even without its architectural and flag-flying aspirations. Its people speak Farsi (Persian) not the Turkic tongues of the other Stans. The Tajik people were never nomads; they settled from the start, and they did it more than a millennia before their UZ-, KYRG-, KAG- and TURK- stanish neighbors galloped onto the scene.

Tajiks are more than an ethnicity; they are a culture which almost as many people outside the country identify with as inside.

Tajikistan’s population is the most religiously conservative in the Stans so you see the most head and face covering, hear the most calls to prayer and have the most trouble finding a beer there. But how many nations put poets and poetry on their currency and name the majority of their streets for writers and philosophers?

Tajikistan manages to be more mountainous than Kyrgyzstan and on better unpaved roads (if there is such a thing).

And arguably more jaw-dropping. Driving from Dushanbe to the Uzbek border one of the most spectacularly scenic routes of a trip already loaded with spectacular scenery.

At the end of the drive through the Fann mountains, the seven glacial lakes awaiting us were photogenic enough to make the bumps worthwhile.

Tajikistan is the only place (so far) where we’ve felt we were in living history. Most of the country’s population lives in the countryside, and the countryside is a place that feels old as time.

In the end, we found the country’s rugged beauty, outsized cultural pride and monumental aspirations impressive but not exactly embraceable.

Casual eye contact is hard to come by. Aesthetics take a back seat to grandeur and functionality to grandiosity. Conversations with our guide sometimes became expeditions into fringe Muslim conspiracy theories.
Tajikistan won’t end up being our favorite stan, but that’s okay. If we left everywhere we visit with a plan to linger we’d probably never get home.

COMING SOON! Alexander the Not-So-Great
Breathtaking.
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I’m relishing your photos and commentary on this trip.
Kelly C. Dellinger
Mobile 707-708-1360
KCDellinger@Hotmail.com
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Thanks for keeping us
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An impressive story and so do the pictures tell. Great!
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I wrote a comment, finally, about this amazing Otherstan post. We are in Orick and it finally seems possible to tackle the password situation. I mentioned that the grandiosity and lack of architectural, etc beauty and scale reminds me to the current situation with our historic White House. Thank you for keeping us up. We have read every post and love them.
From Orick, Karen
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