If something comes hard to you, try doing it twice — experienced masters have long advised this to their apprentices. For goal-oriented and practical people, this rule has always been a way of life.
They are skilled at navigating difficult circumstances, capable of setting challenging tasks and ensuring their successful completion.
People with extraordinary abilities are often considered to belong to the class of natural-born leaders. Masses entrust them with their fate, believing they will not disappoint and will live up to expectations. They willingly take on the heaviest burdens and do not fear great responsibility because they are confident in themselves and their capabilities.
The national leader of the Azerbaijani people, Heydar Aliyev, was and remains in the memory of his compatriots and many others who knew him as an extraordinary personality. He consistently amazed those around him with his remarkable talents and abilities. He always created a center of energetic attraction around himself, drawing people into the orbit of results and effectiveness.
His life and biography represent a rich chronicle of struggle for ideals, for the dignity of his contemporaries, and for high-level governance in the service of the people. As a strong statesman, Heydar Aliyev revealed unique facets of both master and creator during the most difficult periods of life.
These two concepts imply different qualities and meanings. A master, in the popular sense, is someone with special skills who can create a favorable environment for themselves and others. A creator, on the other hand, is someone who can invent something entirely new from nothing — a unique and positive configuration for harmonious development.
Heydar Aliyev’s phenomenon lay in the fact that he combined the refined qualities of both master and creator. That is why he was able to resolve the most difficult and complex dilemmas in governance and high-level geopolitics.
A man devoted to innovation and forward movement, he was exceptionally skilled at motivating people toward action and results at the most critical stages and areas.
It is said that everything in the world has a reverse side. Sometimes the reverse side of seemingly trivial processes brings unexpected surprises, complicating the situation. In the Azerbaijani reality, Heydar Aliyev’s factor always played a stabilizing role, as the natural-born leader masterfully found operational algorithms for addressing tough challenges and unexpected crises.
Not every politician has twice in life taken on the role of a universal crisis manager. The first time, under the socialist system, he transformed Azerbaijan from an agrarian republic into an industrial one. His titanic efforts laid the foundation for the birth of a full-fledged scientific and technical cluster from national personnel.
The best universities and institutes of the Soviet Union accepted Azerbaijani youth for training. Later, they found themselves in leadership roles across all sectors of the revived industry of the newly independent country.
The second time was after Heydar Aliyev, at the request of the people, again took the helm of Azerbaijan — this happened in 1993, after the restoration of national independence. The country, one might say, was in a disassembled state. It was necessary to rebuild the state system and national institutions from scratch — and under conditions of increasing Armenian aggression.
His leadership in the post-Soviet environment revealed the true scale of his personality. He set the task before the nation to build a democratic, secular, and lawful state. The innovative mechanisms and restructuring models he employed became essential. The national leader acted solely according to his own vision and successfully revived the Republic thanks to his insights and foresight.
He demonstrated exceptional mastery in state- and nation-building. It is only natural that grateful compatriots recognized him as the founder of the modern Azerbaijani state. There is not a trace of exaggeration or pathos in that.
If we recall that by mid-1993 the country was gripped by turmoil and confusion, and five years later it was unrecognizable, it becomes clear that Heydar Aliyev was a born crisis manager who could handle large-scale priorities and objectives.
All that is new often carries many risks and uncertainties. Aware of this not from hearsay, Heydar Aliyev always tracked the progress of processes and construction of the new, relying solely on his own calculations, knowledge, and intuition. He, like no one else, understood that new technologies and innovations can become both a blessing and a curse.
To avoid major risks, the national leader successfully combined the qualities of a moderator of complex processes and a leader of challenging programs. He taught that progress must go hand in hand with moral and ethical development, with the full involvement of the younger generations.
A popular saying of a classic comes to mind: calm and self-confident people always carry bold thoughts and progressive ideas. It feels as though this profound thought was drawn directly from the portrait of the great Azerbaijani who brought glory to his people and his country on the world stage.
Always preferring to stay close to the people, Heydar Aliyev remains in the memory of grateful compatriots as a true philosopher of optimism — someone who proved that the world of high politics is a realm of reason, creativity, and moral excellence.