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Tajik Jimmy is the new Susan Boyle

Thu, 06/11/2009 - 12:22pm

Forget Susan Boyle. "Tajik Jimmy" is the new viral star of the Internet. Jimmy's story is so unbelievable that it could easily become the next Hollywood/Bollywood hit like Slumdog Millionaire! The fact that Tajik Jimmy's rise to fame coincides with the rise of anti-Tajik feelings in Russia makes it even more fascinating:

Baimurat Allaberiyev, a diminutive native of Tajikistan who has herded sheep, picked cotton and toiled in construction, hardly looks like Russia's latest musical sensation.

But Allaberiyev has remarkable talent sets him apart from the millions of Central Asians who come to Russia to escape crushing poverty at home.

A musical prodigy, he can perform Bollywood show-stoppers as a one-man band, equipped with nothing but an uncanny falsetto and a metal bucket.

That -- and the miraculous star-making powers of the Internet -- have turned this 37-year-old into a cult celebrity here.

Allaberiyev won fame after shaky videos shot with mobile phones surfaced on the Internet that showed him performing songs like "Jimmy Jimmy Jimmy Aaja" from the 1983 Bollywood classic "Disco Dancer".

Set against grim backdrops like a construction site or a storeroom full of boxes, the videos became a viral sensation. They have now been viewed more than 400,000 times on YouTube, the movie-sharing website.

Allaberiyev -- who is widely known as "Tajik Jimmy" despite the fact that he is actually an ethnic Uzbek -- now has a record deal and has given concerts in Moscow and Saint Petersburg.

His success is striking given that Central Asians suffer widespread discrimination in Russia and are often targeted in racist attacks.

...But fame has led to surreal changes for Allaberiyev, who has been compared to Susan Boyle, the middle-aged Scottish woman who soared to fame when her audition on "Britain's Got Talent" became a smash hit on YouTube.

Allaberiyev spoke to AFP the same day he was filmed by a television crew and visited by a local newspaper photographer.

He recalled how his talents were noticed after he arrived in Russia in 2008 to build the Rio shopping centre, toiling side by side with labourers from across the former Soviet Union.

"When I worked on the construction site, I used to sing songs to myself. Then all the guys -- Russians, Uzbeks, Tajiks -- would come up and film me," said Allaberiyev, who looks much older than his 37 years.

"And they'd say, Jimmy, now we're going to put that on the Internet. And it got on the Internet and lots of people downloaded my songs and heard them.... And that's how I became a star."

Check out one of those grainy videos shot at what I think is Jimmy's construction site.

Fascinating, no? 



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cookie-cutter

Thank you for talking about anti-Tajik sentiment in Russia. The country no one has ever heard of.

Please follow up with a post on anti-Russian feelings among the Tajik in Russia, and in Tajikistanian.

Do you feel compelled to be a Rusophobe by virtue of your colleagues- otherwise you wouldn't have a job in the US on foreign policy issues, or are you a genuine Rusophobe?

Hard not to be a conformist, is it?

PS. You're obviously too young, to know much about the popularity of Indian culture in the USSR. Nor do you seem to have enough friends from Central Asia, to know of the growing diaspora in Afghanistan, India, and Pakistan. By the way, how's the treatment of Tajiks there?

Excuse me...

Your post is flawed in logic, and betrays bigotry of its own.

First of all, you just proved the author's point on anti-Tajik discrimination by dismissing Tajikistan as "the country no one has ever heard of."

Next, you criticize the author's very valid observation (that you just unceremoniously illustrated) that yes, there are people who discriminate against Tajiks. And it just so happens that a lot of them are from Russia.

Third, acknowledging that many Russians discriminate against an ethnic group does not qualify as "Rusophobia." If I acknowledge that many whites have held black slaves in America, and have been discriminatory towards blacks, does that make me anti-white?

We're talking about the truth here. You can't handle the truth, so you try to masquerade under posturing-as-a-politically-correct-crusader bullshit. Fortunately, intelligent people can see right through it.

Oh, and Tajiks are treated rather well in all of the other countries you mentioned.

Excuse me as well.

I've lived in Tajikistan and have Central Asian relatives in Russia. Yes, there is institutional racism in Tajikistan that helps to exclude Russians from some government and private sector jobs, but what you do not have is the fairly pervasive hateful attitudes that lead to so many racist attacks, like you have in Russia.

Russia is now estimated to have half of the world's skinheads. One of the easiest things to find on the net are videos of Russian skinheads beating up migrants. I've had distant Central Asian relatives murdered by skinheads.

This hate is all the more perplexing when you consider that:
1. Russia colonized these nations, forced their economies to be dependent on Moscow, made Russian the laguna blanca and then left them in a poor economic and political state.
2. Russia's population is declining fast and they have a need for young migrant labor.

Rusophobe, my eye.

Ah yes, with a name like "Evgeny Morozov" the author *must* be a Rusophobe!

Only some doltish Pollyanna who hasn't been to Russia for the past 20 years would be unaware of the rise of right-wing racist-nationalist sentiment there following the collapse of the Soviet Union. Noting that there is increasing scapegoating of Central Asian immigrants in Russia's larger cities is a plain statement of fact--no more controversial than saying there is anti-immigrant sentiment in many parts of the United States.

Well...

...AFAIK mr. Morozov is Belarusian. Since I don't know any about any Eastern European country which looooves Russia, I'd bet it would be very natural to him to be Russophobe. But it is irrelevant, anyway, since as far as I noted, mr Morozov is very reasonable in his analysis and, anyway, he didn't say anything that seems Russophobe or even apparently false (except in some ingenious and probably very partial minds).

By the way, great vid! I liked it specially because it is about someone from that obscure region called Central Asia. I knew that the world became flat (sort of...), the novelty is that even Central Asia is flat too! :P