fbpx
Wikipedia

Doukhobors

The Doukhobours or Dukhobors (Russian: духоборы / духоборцы, romanizeddukhobory / dukhobortsy; lit.'Spirit-Warriors / Wrestlers')[2][3][4][5] are a Spiritual Christian ethnoreligious group of Russian origin. They are known for their pacifism and tradition of oral history, hymn-singing, and verse. They reject the Russian Orthodox priesthood and associated rituals, believing that personal revelation is more important than the Bible. Facing persecution by the Russian government for their nonorthodox beliefs, many migrated to Canada between 1899 and 1938, where most currently reside.[6]

Doukhobors
Doukhobour women, 1887
Founder
Siluan Kolesnikov (17??–1775)
Regions with significant populations
Canada (British Columbia etc)40,000[1]
Southern Russia30,000
Religions
Christianity (Spiritual Christianity)
Scriptures
the Book of Life (a hymnal)
Languages
South Russian • English
Related ethnic groups
Russians
Website
www.doukhobor.orguscc-doukhobors.org/

Doukhobors are often categorized as "folk-Protestants", Spiritual Christians, sectarians, and heretics. Among their core beliefs is the rejection of materialism. They also reject the Russian Orthodox priesthood, the use of icons, and all associated church rituals. Doukhobors believe the Bible alone is not enough to reach divine revelation[7] and that doctrinal conflicts can interfere with their faith. Biblical teachings are evident in some published Doukhobor psalms, hymns, and beliefs.

The Doukhobors have a history dating back to at least 1701, although some scholars suspect the group has earlier origins.[8] Doukhobors traditionally lived in their own villages and practiced communal living. The term "Spirit-Wrestlers" was originally used to disparage the group by the Russian Orthodox Church.[9]

Before 1886, the Doukhobors had a series of single leaders. The origin of the Doukhobors is uncertain; they first appear in first written records from 1701,

The Doukhobors traditionally ate bread and borsch.[10][11] Some of their food-related religious symbols are bread, salt, and water.[12]

History

In the 17th-and-18th-century Russian Empire, the first recorded Doukhobors concluded clergy and formal rituals are unnecessary, believing in God's presence in every human being. They rejected the secular government, the Russian Orthodox priests, icons, all church rituals, and the belief the Bible is a supreme source of divine revelation.[7] The Doukhobors believed in the divinity of Jesus; their practices, emphasis on individual interpretation, and opposition to the government and church provoked antagonism from the government and the established Russian Eastern Orthodox Church. In 1734, the Russian government issued an edict against ikonobortsy (those who reject icons), condemning them as iconoclasts.[13]

The first-known Doukhobor leader was Siluan (Silvan) Kolesnikov (Russian: Силуан Колесников), who was active from 1755 to 1775. Kolesnikov lived in the village Nikolskoye, Yekaterinoslav Governorate, in modern-day south-central Ukraine.[13] Kolesnikov was familiar with the works of Western mystics such as Karl von Eckartshausen and Louis Claude de Saint-Martin.[14]

The early Doukhobors called themselves "God's People" or "Christians." Their modern name, first in the form Doukhobortsy (Russian: духоборцы, dukhobortsy (Spirit wrestlers) ) is thought to have been first used in 1785 or 1786 by Ambrosius the Archbishop of Yekaterinoslav[13][15] or his predecessor Nikifor (Nikephoros Theotokis).[16][a] The archbishop's intent was to mock the Doukhobors as heretics fighting against the Holy Spirit (Russian: Святой Дух, Svyatoy Dukh) but around the beginning of the 19th century, according to SA Inikova,[16] the dissenters adopted the name "Doukhobors" usually in a shorter form Doukhobory (Russian: духоборы, dukhobory), implying they are fighting alongside rather than against the Holy Spirit.[13][18] The first known use of the spelling Doukhobor is in a 1799 government edict exiling 90 of the group to Finland;[13] presumably the Vyborg area, which was part of the Russian Empire at the time, for producing anti-war propaganda.[19]

The early Doukhobors were pacifists who rejected military institutions and war and were thus oppressed in Imperial Russia. Both the tsarist state and church authorities were involved in the persecution and deprivation of the dissidents' normal freedoms.[20]

In 1802, Tsar Alexander I encouraged the resettlement of religious minorities to the "Milky Waters" (Molochnye Vody) region around the Molochnaya River around Melitopol in modern-day southern Ukraine. This was motivated by the desire to quickly populate the rich steppe lands on the north shore of the Black and Azov Seas, and to prevent the "heretics" from contaminating the population of the heartland with their ideas. Many Doukhobors, as well as Mennonites from Prussia, accepted the Emperor's offer and travelled to the Molochnaya from other provinces of the Empire over the next 20 years.[19]

Transcaucasian exile

 
The village of Gorelovka in southern Georgia, the "capital" of the Doukhobors of Transcaucasia (1893)
 
The Doukhobor worship place in Georgia

When Nicholas I succeeded Alexander as Tsar, on February 6, 1826, he issued a decree intending to force the assimilation of the Doukhobors through military conscription, prohibiting their meetings, and encouraging conversions to the established church.[13][18] On October 20, 1830, another decree followed, specifying all able-bodied members of dissenting religious groups engaged in propaganda against the established church should be conscripted and sent to the Russian army in the Caucasus while those not capable of military service, and their women and children, should be resettled in Russia's recently acquired Transcaucasian provinces. With other dissenters, around 5,000 Doukhobors were resettled in Georgia between 1841 and 1845. Akhalkalaki uyezd (district) in the Tiflis Governorate was chosen as the main place of their settlement.[19] Doukhobor villages with Russian names appeared there; Gorelovka, Rodionovka, Yefremovka, Orlovka, Spasskoye (Dubovka), Troitskoye, and Bogdanovka. Later, other groups of Doukhobors were resettled by the government or migrated to Transcaucasia of their own accord. They also settled in neighbouring areas, including the Borchaly uyezd of Tiflis Governorate and the Kedabek uyezd of Elisabethpol Governorate.[21]

In 1844, Doukhobors who were being exiled from their home near Melitopol to the village of Bogdanovka carved the Doukhobor Memorial Stone, which is now held in the collection of the Melitopol Museum of Local History.[22]

After Russia's conquest of Kars and the Treaty of San Stefano of 1878, some Dukhobors from Tiflis and Elisabethpol Governorates moved to the Zarushat and Shuragel uyezds of the newly created Kars Oblast to the north-east of Kars in the modern-day Republic of Turkey.[23] The leader of the main group of Doukhobors, who arrived in Transcaucasia from Ukraine in 1841, was Illarion Kalmykov (Russian: Илларион Калмыков). He died in the same year and was succeeded as the community leader by his son Peter Kalmykov (?–1864). After Peter Kalmykov's death in 1864, his widow Lukerya Vasilyevna Gubanova (? – December 15, 1886; (Russian: Лукерья Васильевна Губанова); also known as Kalmykova) took his leadership position.[24]

The Kalmykov dynasty lived in the village of Gorelovka, a Doukhobor community in Georgia.[25][21] Lukerya was respected by the provincial authorities, who had to cooperate with the Doukhobors. At the time of her death in 1886, there were around 20,000 Doukhobors in Transcaucasia. By that time, the region's Doukhobors had become vegetarian and were aware of Leo Tolstoy's philosophy, which they found quite similar to their own traditional teachings.[24]

Religious revival and crises

The death of Lukerya, who had no children, was followed by a leadership crisis that divided the Dukhobortsy in the Caucasus into two major groups, which disputed their next leader. Lukerya wanted leadership to pass to her assistant Peter Vasilevich Verigin. Although most of the community—"the Large Party" Russian: Большая сторона, romanizedBolshaya Storona—accepted him as the leader, a minority faction known as "the Small Party" (Малая сторона Malaya Storona) rejected Verigin, and sided with Lukerya's brother Michael Gubanov and the village elder Aleksei Zubkov.[24][26][18]

 
The Doukhobor village in Slavyanka Azerbaijan 2018

While the Large Party was a majority, the Small Party had the support of the older members of the community and the local authorities. On January 26, 1887, at a community service at which the new leader was to be acclaimed, police arrived and arrested Verigin. He, along with some of his associates, was sent into internal exile in Siberia. Large Party Doukhobors continued to consider Verigin their spiritual leader and to communicate with him, by mail and via delegates who travelled to see him in Obdorsk.[24][26][27] An isolated population of exiled Doukhobors, a third "party", was about 5,000 miles (8,000 km) east in Amur Oblast.

At the same time, the Russian government applied greater pressure to enforce the Doukhobors' compliance with its laws and regulations. The Doukhobors had resisted registering marriages and births, contributing grain to state emergency funds, and swearing oaths of allegiance. In 1887, Russia extended universal military conscription, which applied to the rest of the empire, to the Transcaucasian provinces. While the Small Party cooperated with the state, the Large Party, reacting to the arrest of their leaders and inspired by their letters from exile,[28] felt strengthened in their desire to abide by the righteousness of their faith. Under instructions from Verigin, the Large Party stopped using tobacco and alcohol, divided their property equally among the members of the community, and resolved to adhere to the practice of pacifism and non-violence. They refused to swear the oath of allegiance required in 1894 by the newly ascended Tsar Nicholas II.[13][26]

Under further instructions from Verigin, about 7,000 of the most zealous Doukhobors—about one-third of all Doukhobors—of the three Governorates of Transcaucasia destroyed their weapons and refused to serve in the military. As the Doukhobors gathered to burn their guns on the night of June 28/29 (July 10/11, Gregorian calendar) 1895, while singing psalms and spiritual songs, government Cossacks arrested and beat them. Shortly after, the government billeted Cossacks in many of the Large Party's villages; around 4,000 Doukhobors were forced to disperse to villages in other parts of Georgia. Many died of starvation and exposure.[26][29]

Migration to Canada

First emigrants

 
The port of Batumi as it was in 1881. Here the Doukhobors embarked on their transatlantic journey in 1898 and 1899[30]

The resistance of the Doukhobors gained international attention and the Russian Empire was criticized for its treatment of this religious minority. In 1897, the Russian government agreed to let the Doukhobors leave the country, subject to conditions:

  • emigrants should never return;
  • emigrants must emigrate at their own expense;
  • community leaders currently in prison or exile in Siberia must serve the balance of their sentences before they could leave Russia.[13]

Emigrants initially attempted to settle in Cyprus. Cyprus was, at the time, recognized as a possession of the Ottoman Empire, but in the wake of the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878), the Ottoman Empire had granted the United Kingdom the right to administer the island in exchange for support in its continuing conflict with the Russian Empire. This fact made the potential settlement of the Russian Doukhobors a politically-sensitive question among some in the British government, but after Quaker supporters both made assurances of the Doukhobors' political inoffensiveness and provided financial guarantees against their potential indigency, officials permitted over 1,000 Doukhobors to establish farming settlements in several locations on the island beginning in the second half of 1898. However, the Cyprus experiment soon proved to be disastrous: beset by disease (made worse by insufficient food that met the Doukhobors' religious requirements) as well as internal disagreements over community organization, nearly ten percent of the colony died by early 1899.[citation needed]

Canada offered more land, transportation, and aid to resettle in the Saskatchewan area. Around 6,000 Doukhobors emigrated there in the first half of 1899, settling on land granted to them by the government in modern-day Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. The Cyprus colony and others joined them, and around 7,500 Russian Doukhobor emigrants—about a third of their number in Russia—arrived in Canada by the end of the year.[31] Several smaller groups joined the main body of emigrants in later years, coming directly from Transcaucasia and other places of exile.[26] Among these latecomers were 110 leaders of the community who had to complete their sentences before being allowed to emigrate.[31] By 1930, about 8,780 Doukhobors had migrated from Russia to Canada.[32]

The Quakers and Tolstoyan movement covered most of the costs of passage for the emigrants; writer Leo Tolstoy arranged for the royalties from his novel Resurrection, his story Father Sergei, and some others to go to the emigration fund. Tolstoy also raised money from wealthy friends; his efforts provided about 30,000 rubles, half of the emigration fund. The anarchist Peter Kropotkin and professor of political economy at the University of Toronto James Mavor also helped the emigrants.[33][34]

The emigrants adapted to life in agricultural communes; they were mostly of peasant origin and had low regard for advanced education. [b] Many worked as loggers, lumbermen, and carpenters. Eventually, many left the communal dormitories and became private farmers on the Canadian plains. Religious a cappella singing, pacifism, and passive resistance were markers of the sect. One subgroup occasionally demonstrated naked, typically as a protest against compulsory military service.[36] Their policies made them controversial. The modern descendants of the first wave of Doukhobor emigrants continue to live in southeastern British Columbia communities such as Krestova, and in southern Alberta and Saskatchewan. As of 1999, the estimated population of Doukhobor descent in North America was 40,000 in Canada and about 5,000 in the United States.[1]

Canadian prairies

 
Vosnesenia ('Ascension') village, NE of Arran, Saskatchewan (North Colony). A typical one-street village, modelled on those in the Old World.

In accordance with the Dominion Lands Act of 1872, for a nominal fee of $10, the Canadian government would grant 160 acres (0.65 km2) of land to any male homesteader who was able to establish a working farm on that land within three years. Single-family homesteads would not fit the Doukhobors' communitarian tradition but a "Hamlet Clause" within the Act had been adopted 15 years earlier to accommodate other communitarian groups such as Mennonites. The clause allowed beneficiaries of the Act to live in a hamlet within 3 miles (4.8 km) from their land rather than on the land itself.[37] This allowed the Doukhobors to establish a communal lifestyle similar to that of the Hutterites. Also, by passing Section 21 of the Dominion Military Act in late 1898, the Canadian Government exempted the Doukhobors from military service.[37]

The land for the Doukhobor immigrants, in total 773,400 acres (3,130 km2) within what was to soon become the Province of Saskatchewan, came in three block settlement areas or "reserves", and an annex:[38]

  • The North Colony, also known as the "Thunder Hill Colony" or "Swan River Colony" in the Pelly and Arran districts of Saskatchewan became home to 2,400 Doukhobors from Tiflis Governorate, who established 20 villages on 69,000 acres (280 km2) of the land grant.
  • The South Colony, also known as the "Whitesand Colony" or "Yorkton Colony" in the Canora, Veregin and Kamsack districts of Saskatchewan. 3,500 Doukhobors from Tiflis Governorate, Elisabethpol Governorate, and Kars Oblast settled there in 30 villages on 215,010 acres (870.1 km2) of land grant.
  • The Good Spirit Lake Annex in the Buchanan district of Saskatchewan received 1,000 Doukhobors from Elisabethpol Governorate and Kars Oblast, Russia, and settled there in eight villages on 168,930 acres (683.6 km2) of land grant. The annex was along the Good Spirit River, which flows into Good Spirit Lake (previously known as Devil's Lake).
  • The Saskatchewan Colony, also known as the "Rosthern Colony",[37] "Prince Albert Colony" and "Duck Lake Colony" was located along North Saskatchewan River in the Langham and Blaine Lake districts of Saskatchewan, north-west of Saskatoon. 1,500 Doukhobors from Kars Oblast settled there in 13 villages on 324,800 acres (1,314 km2) of land grant.

North and South Colonies, and Good Spirit Lake Annex, were located around Yorkton near the modern-day border with Manitoba; the Saskatchewan (Rosthern) Colony was located north-west of Saskatoon, a significant distance from the other three reserves.[citation needed]

In 1899, all four reserves formed part of the Northwest Territories: Saskatchewan (Rosthern) Colony in the territories' provisional District of Saskatchewan. North Reserve straddled the boundary of Saskatchewan and Assiniboia districts, and the other reserves were entirely in Assiniboia. After the establishment of the Province of Saskatchewan in 1905, all reserves were located within that province.[citation needed]

 
Doukhobor women pulling a plow, Thunder Hill Colony, Manitoba

Verigin persuaded his followers to free their animals, and pull their wagons and plows themselves. On the lands granted to them in the prairies, the settlers established Russian-style villages, some of which received Russian names after settlers' home villages in Transcaucasia; for example Spasovka, Large and Small Gorelovka, and Slavianka; while others gained more abstract "spiritual" names not common in Russia, such as Uspeniye (Dormition), Terpeniye (Patience), Bogomdannoye (Given by God), and Osvobozhdeniye (Liberation).[38] The settlers found Saskatchewan winters much harsher than those in Transcaucasia, and expressed disappointment the climate was not as suitable for growing fruits and vegetables. Women greatly outnumbered the men; many women worked on the farms tilling the land while many men took non-farm jobs, especially in railway construction.[37] The earliest arrivals came from three backgrounds, had varying commitments to communal life, and lacked leadership. Verigin arrived in December 1902, was recognized as the leader, and reimposed communalism and self-sufficiency. The railway arrived in 1904 and hopes of isolation from Canadian society ended.[39][40]

Popular distrust

Canadians, politicians, and the media were deeply suspicious of the Doukhobors. Their communal lifestyle seemed suspicious, their refusal to send children to school was considered deeply troubling, while pacifism caused anger during the First World War. The Doukhobor faction known as Sons of Freedom conducted nude marches and carried out night-time arson attacks, which was considered unacceptable and offensive.[41] Canadian magazines showed strong curiosity, giving special attention to women's bodies and clothing. Magazines and newspapers carried stories and photographs of Doukhobor women engaging in hard farm labour, doing "women's work", wearing the traditional ethnic dress, and in partial or total states of undress.[42] Doukhobors received financial help from Quakers. Clifford Sifton, the Minister of the Interior, wanted the Doukhobors in Canada; he arranged financial subsidies to allow them to migrate.[43]

Loss of land rights

Due to the community's aversion to private ownership of land, Verigin had the land registered in the name of the community. By 1906, the Canadian Government's new Minister of the Interior Frank Oliver started requiring the registration of land in the name of individual owners. Many Doukhobors refused to comply, resulting in 1907 in the reverting of more than a third (258,880 acres (1,047.7 km2)) of Doukhobor lands back to the Crown. The loss of legal title to their land became a major grievance.

Schism

Ten years after the Russian conscription crisis, another political issue arose because the Doukhobors would have to become naturalized British citizens and swear an Oath of Allegiance to the British Crown—something that had always been against their principles.[44]

The issue resulted in a three-way split of the Doukhobor community in Canada:[13]

  • The edinolichniki (Independents), who in 1907 comprised 10% of the Canadian Doukhobors, maintained their religion but abandoned communal ownership of land and rejected hereditary leadership and communal living as non-essential to it.
  • The largest group, the Community Doukhobors, sometimes called "orthodox Doukhobors" continued to be loyal to their spiritual leader Peter V. Verigin. They formed the Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood (CCUB), which reformed in 1939 as the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ (USCC).[45]
  • The more radical Sons of Freedom group (originally Svobodniki (sovereign people), who were called "Freedomites" by the press, emerged in 1903; they embraced Verigin's writings in such a zealous manner he banned them from his community. Reporters often conflated them with law-abiding Doukhobors and focused on their sensational behaviours.[citation needed]

Of these groupings, the Independents integrated the most readily into Canadian capitalist society. They had no problem registering their land groups and largely remained in Saskatchewan. In 1939, they definitively rejected the authority of Peter Verigin's great-grandson John J. Verigin.[citation needed]

British Columbia and Verigin's assassination

In 1908, to remove his followers from the corrupting influence of non-Doukhobors and edinolichniki (individual owners) Doukhobors, and to find better conditions for agriculture, Verigin bought large tracts of land in south-eastern British Columbia. His first purchase was around Grand Forks near the US border. He later acquired large tracts of land further east in the Slocan Valley around Castlegar. Between 1908 and 1912, about 8,000 people moved from Saskatchewan to these British Columbia lands to continue their communal way of living.[38] In the milder climate of British Columbia, the settlers were able to plant fruit trees and within a few years became renowned orchardists and producers of fruit preserves. As the Community Doukhobors left Saskatchewan, the reserves there were closed by 1918.

 
Verigin Memorial

On October 29, 1924, Peter V. Verigin was killed in a bomb explosion on a scheduled passenger train en route to British Columbia. The government had initially stated the bombing was perpetrated by people within the Doukhobor community, although no arrests were made because of the Doukhobors' customary refusal to cooperate with Canadian authorities due to fear of intersect violence. It is still unknown who was responsible for the bombing. While the Doukhobors were initially welcomed by the Canadian government, this assassination, as well as Doukhobors' beliefs regarding communal living, their intolerance for schooling, and other beliefs considered offensive or unacceptable, created a decades-long mistrust between government authorities and Doukhobors.[46]

Peter V. Verigin's son Peter P. Verigin, who arrived from the Soviet Union in 1928, succeeded his father as leader of the Community Doukhobors. He became known as Peter the Purger and worked to smooth relations between the Community Doukhobors and wider Canadian society. The governments in Ottawa and the western provinces concluded he was the closet leader of the Sons of Freedom and was perhaps a dangerous Bolshevik. The governments decided to deport him, use the justice system to impose conformity to Canadian values on the Doukhobors, and force them to abide by Canadian law and repudiate unacceptable practices. With a legal defence managed by Peter Makaroff, the deportation effort failed in 1933.[47] The Sons of Freedom repudiated Verigin's policies as ungodly and assimilationist, and escalated their protests. The Sons of Freedom burnt Community Doukhobors' property and organized more nude parades. In 1932, the Parliament of Canada responded by criminalizing public nudity. Over 300 radical Doukhobor men and women were arrested for this offence, which typically carried a three-year prison sentence.[37]

Nudism and arson

The Sons of Freedom used nudism and arson as visible methods of protest.[48] They protested against materialism, the land seizure by the government, compulsory education in government schools, and Verigin's assassination. This led to many confrontations with the Canadian government and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which continued into the 1970s. Nudism was first used after the Doukhobors' arrival in Canada.[36] They used violence to fight modernity, and destroyed threshing machines and other signs of modernity. The group conducted night-time arson attacks on schools built by the Doukhobor commune and Verigin's house.[46]

During 1947 and 1948, Sullivan's Royal Commission investigated acts of arson and bombing attacks in British Columbia and recommended several measures intended to integrate the Doukhobors into Canadian society, notably through the education of their children in public schools. Around that time, the provincial government entered into direct negotiations with the Freedomite leadership. W. A. C. Bennett's Social Credit government, which came to power in 1952, took a harder stance against the "Doukhobor problem." In 1953, 174 children of the Sons of Freedom were forcibly interned by government agents in a residential school in New Denver, British Columbia. Abuse of the interned children was later alleged.[49][50]

In less than fifty years, the Sons of Freedom committed 1,112 separate acts of violence and arson, costing over $20 million in damages; these acts include bombing and arson attacks on public schools, bombings of Canadian railway bridges and tracks,[51] the bombing of a courthouse at Nelson,[52] and the destruction of a power transmission tower servicing East Kootenay district resulting in the loss of 1,200 jobs. Many of the independent and community Doukhobors believed the Sons of Freedom's arson and bombings violated the Doukhobor central principle of nonviolence, and that they did not deserve to be called Doukhobors.[53]

Doukhobors remaining in Russia

After the departure of the more zealous and uncompromising Doukhobors, and many community leaders, to Canada at the close of the Elisabethpol Governorate in the Caucasus Viceroyalty (now Azerbaijan), the former Doukhobor villages became mostly repopulated by Baptists. Elsewhere, some Doukhobors joined nearby Spiritual Christian groups.[24]

Those who remained Doukhobors were required to submit to the state. Few protested against military service; of 837 Russian court-martial cases against conscientious objectors recorded between the beginning of World War I and April 1, 1917, 16 had Doukhobor defendants, none of whom hailed from the Transcaucasian provinces.[24] Between 1921 and 1923, Verigin's son Peter P. Verigin arranged the resettlement of 4,000 Doukhobors from the Ninotsminda (Bogdanovka) district in south Georgia to Rostov Oblast in southern Russia, and another 500 into Zaporizhzhia Oblast in Ukraine.[26][54]

The Soviet reforms greatly affected the lives of the Doukhobors, both in their old villages in Georgia and in the new settlement areas in southern Russian and Ukraine. State anti-religious campaigns resulted in the suppression of Doukhobor religious tradition, and the loss of books and archival records. Many religious leaders were arrested or exiled; for example, 18 people were exiled from Gorelovka in 1930.[26] Communists' imposition of collective farming did not contradict the Doukhobor way of life. Industrious Doukhobors made their collective farms prosperous, often specializing in cheesemaking.[26]

Of the Doukhobor communities in the Soviet Union, those in South Georgia were the most sheltered from outside influence because of their geographic isolation in mountainous terrain, their location near the international border, and concomitant travel restrictions for outsiders.[26]

Hymnody

Doukhobor oral holy hymns, which they call the "Book of Life" (Russian: Zhivotnaya kniga), de facto replaced the written Bible. Their teaching is founded on this tradition.[55][56] The Book of Life of the Doukhobors (1909) is the first printed hymnal containing songs in the Southern Russian dialect, which were composed to be sung aloud. Their prayer meetings and gatherings are dominated by the singing of a cappella psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs.[56]

Population

Current population

In 2001, an estimated 20,000–40,000 people of Doukhobor heritage lived in Canada, 3,800 of whom claimed "Doukhobor" as their religious affiliation. An estimated 30,000 people of Doukhobor heritage live in Russia and neighbouring countries. In 2011, there were 2,290 persons in Canada who identified their religious affiliation as "Doukhobor"; in Russia there were 50 such persons by the mid-2000s.

Canada

CCUB, the Orthodox Doukhobors organization or Community Doukhobors, was succeeded by the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ formed by Peter P. Verigin, Peter V. Verigin's son, in 1938.[57] The largest and most active formal Doukhobor organization, it is headquartered in Grand Forks, British Columbia.[58]

During the Canada 2011 Census,[59] 2,290 persons in Canada—of whom 1,860 in British Columbia, 200 in Alberta, 185 in Saskatchewan, and 25 in Ontario—identified their religious affiliation as "Doukhobor". The proportion of older people among these self-identified Doukhobors is higher than among the general population.

Age groups Total 0–14 years 15–24 years 25–44 years 45–64 years 65–84 years 85 years and over
All Canadians, 2001 29,639,035 5,737,670 3,988,200 9,047,175 7,241,135 3,337,435 287,415
Self-identified Doukhobors, 2001 3,800 415 345 845 1,135 950 110
Self-identified Doukhobors, 1991 4,820 510 510 1,125 1,400 1,175 100

Twenty-eight percent of the self-identified Doukhobors in 2001 were over 65 (born before 1936), as compared to 12% of the entire population of Canadian respondents. The aging of the denomination is accompanied by its shrinkage, starting in the 1960s:[59][60]

Census year Self-identified Doukhobor population
1921 12,674
1931 14,978
1941 16,898
1951 13,175
1961 13,234
1971 9,170
1981.g., 28% ?
1991 4,820
2001 3,800
2011 2,290

The number of Canadians with Doukhobor heritage is much higher than the number of those who consider themselves members of this religion. In 2012, Doukhobor researchers estimated there were "over 20,000" people "from [Doukhobor] stock" in Canada[60] and over 40,000 Doukhobors by "a wider definition of religion, ethnicity, way of life, and social movement".[61][page needed]

Canadian Doukhobors no longer live communally. Doukhobors do not practice baptism. They reject several items considered orthodox among Christian churches, including church organization and liturgy, the inspiration of the scriptures, the literal interpretation of resurrection, the literal interpretation of the Trinity, and heaven and hell. Some avoid the use of alcohol, tobacco, and animal products for food, and eschew involvement in partisan politics. Doukhobors believe in the goodness of man and reject the idea of original sin.[62]

Georgia and Russia

 
Peter Kalmykov's house in Gorelovka, Georgia

Since the late 1980s, many of the Doukhobors of Georgia started emigrating to Russia. Various groups moved to Tula Oblast, Rostov Oblast, Stavropol Krai, and elsewhere. After the 1991 independence of Georgia, many villages with Russian names received Georgian names; Bogdanovka became Ninotsminda, Troitskoe became Sameba. According to various estimates, in Ninotsminda District, the Doukhobor population fell from around 4,000 in 1979 to between 3,000 and 3,500 in 1989, and around 700 in 2006. In Dmanisi district, it fell from around 700 Doukhobors in 1979 to no more than 50 by the mid-2000s. Most of those who remain in Georgia are older people; the younger generation found it easier to relocate to Russia. The Doukhobor community of Gorelovka in Ninotsminda District, the former "capital" of the Kalmykov family, is thought to be the best-preserved in all former Soviet Union countries.[26]

Ecumenical relations

The Doukhobors have maintained a close association with Mennonites and Quakers due to similar religious practices; all of these groups are collectively considered to be peace churches due to their belief in pacifism.[63][64][65]

Historical sites and museums

 
Leo Tolstoy Statue at Doukhobor Discovery Centre

In 1995, the Doukhobor Suspension Bridge spanning the Kootenay River was designated a National Historic Site of Canada.[66] The site of Community Doukhobors' headquarters in Veregin, Saskatchewan, was designated a National Historic Site in 2006, under the name "Doukhobors at Veregin".

A Doukhobor museum, currently known as "Doukhobor Discovery Centre" (formerly, "Doukhobor Village Museum") operates in Castlegar, British Columbia. It contains over 1,000 artifacts representing the arts, crafts, and daily lives of the Doukhobors of the Kootenays in 1908–38.[67][68]

Although most of the early Doukhobor village structures in British Columbia have vanished or been significantly remodelled by later users, a part of Makortoff Village outside Grand Forks, British Columbia has been preserved as a museum by Peter Gritchen, who purchased the property in 1971 and opened it as Mountain View Doukhobor Museum on June 16, 1972. The site's future became uncertain after his death in 2000 but in March 2004, in cooperation with local organizations and concerned citizens, The Land Conservancy of British Columbia purchased the historical site known as Hardy Mountain Doukhobor Village while Boundary Museum Society acquired the museum collection and loaned it to TLC for display.[69]

The Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa has a collection of Doukhobor-related items. A special exhibition there was run in 1998–99 to mark the centennial anniversary of the Doukhobor arrival in Canada.[70]

Linguistic history and dialect

The Doukhobors took with them to Canada a Southern Russian dialect, which in the following decades changed under the influence of Canadian English and the speech of the Ukrainian settlers in Saskatchewan. Over several generations, this dialect has been mostly lost because the modern descendants of the original Doukhobor migrants to Canada are typically native English speakers; when they speak Russian, it is typically a fairly standard variety.[5]

Linguistic history

In 1802, the Doukhobors and other spiritual Christian tribes were encouraged to migrate to the Molochna River region around Melitopol near Ukraine's Sea of Azov coast, within the Pale of Settlement neighbouring settlements of anabaptists from Germany.[19][71] Over the next 10 or 20 years, the Doukhobors and others, mostly speaking a variety of Southern Russian dialects, arrived at the Molochna from several provinces, most of which are located in modern-day eastern Ukraine and south-central Russia.[72] In the settlers' villages, an opportunity for the formation of a dialect koiné based on Southern Russian and Eastern Ukrainian dialects arose.[5][73]

Starting in 1841, the Doukhobors and others were resettled from southern Ukraine to Transcaucasia, where they founded several villages surrounded by mostly non-Russian speaking neighbours—primarily Azerbaijanis in Elisabethpol Governorate, Armenians[74] in Tiflis Governorate, and likely a mix of both in the later post-1878 settlements in Kars Oblast. These conditions allowed the dialect to develop in comparative isolation from mainstream Russian.[5]

With the migration of 7,500 Doukhbors from Transcaucasia to Saskatchewan in 1899, and some smaller latecomer groups from both Transcaucasia and from places of exile in Siberia and elsewhere, the dialect spoken in the Doukhobor villages of Transcaucasia was taken to the plains of Canada. From that point, it experienced influence from Canadian English and, during the years of Doukhobor stay in Saskatchewan, the speech of their Ukrainian neighbours.[5][75][76]

A split in the Doukhobor community resulted in a large number of Doukhobors moving from Saskatchewan to south-eastern British Columbia around 1910. Those who moved, the so-called Community Doukhobors—followers of Peter Verigin's Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood—continued living communally for several decades, and had a better chance to preserve their Russian language than the Independent Doukhobors, who stayed in Saskatchewan as individual farmers.[5]

By the 1970s, as most Russian-born members of the community died, English became the first language of the great majority of Canadian Doukhobors.[77][60] Their English speech is not noticeably different from that of other English-speaking Canadians of their provinces. Russian still remains in use, at least for religious purposes, among those who practice the Doukhobor religion.[5]

Features of the Doukhobor Russian dialect in Canada

Research into the Russian spoken by Canada's Doukhobors has not been extensive but several articles, mostly published in the 1960s and 1970s, noted a variety of features in Doukhobors' Russian speech that were characteristic of Southern, and in some cases Central Russian dialects; for example, use of the Southern [h] where Standard Russian has [g].[73][78]

Features characteristic of many locales in the East Slavic language space were noted, reflecting the heterogeneous origin of the Doukhobors' settlements in Molochna River after 1800; for example, like Belarusians, Doukhobor speakers do not palatalize [r] in "редко" (redko, 'seldom'). Remarkable was the dropping of the final -t in the third-person singular form of verbs, which can be considered a Ukrainian feature and is also attested in some Russian dialects spoken in Southern Ukraine (e.g., Nikolaev near the Doukhobors' former homeland on the Molochna. As with other immigrant groups, the Russian speech of the Doukhobors uses English loanwords for some concepts they had not encountered until moving to Canada.[21]: 74 [78]

In popular culture

  • A 1962 Eric Frank Russell science-fiction novel, The Great Explosion, adapted and expanded from his 1951 novella "...And Then There Were None", mentions the Doukhobors as a group of interstellar settlers on the planet Hygeia who had been marginalized by later naturist settlers.
  • Roy, Gabrielle (1975), "Hoodoo Valley", Garden in the wind (novel), McClelland & Stewart.
  • A Robert A. Heinlein short story, The Year of the Jackpot, briefly mentions the Doukhobors as a group in Canada that practised nudity.
  • O'Neail, Hazel (1962), Doukhobor Daze, Gray's, Evergreen.
  • Parry, Nerys (2011), Man and Other Natural Disasters, Great Plains.[79]
  • Plotnikoff, Vi (2001). Head Cook at Weddings and Funerals, And Other Stories of Doukhobor Life (novel). Raincoast Books..
  • Stenson, Bill (2007). Svoboda (novel). Thistledown Press. ISBN 978-1-897235-30-0..[80]

Drama

  • Doukhobors (1970). Collective creation at Theatre Passe Muraille.

Non-fiction

  • Marsden, Philip (1998), The Spirit Wrestlers: A Russian Odyssey, HarperCollins.
  • Tarasoff, Koozma J. (2002), Spirit Wrestlers: Doukhobor Pioneers' Strategies for Living, Legas.
  • Woodcock, George; Avakumovic, Ivan (1977), The Doukhobors, Carleton University Institute of Canadian Studies, McClelland & Stewart.
  • Wright, James; Wright, Frederic Church (1940), Slava Bohu, Farrar & Rinehart Inc.

Music

  • Reynolds, Malvina (1962), "Do As the Doukhobors Do", The Best of Broadside 1962–88, US (originally The Doukhobor Do) is about the Doukhobor nude protests. The song was recorded by Pete Seeger.
  • In the bonus track "Ferdinand the Imposter" on the 2000 re-issue of Music from Big Pink by the Canadian roots-rock group The Band, the title character "claimed he was a Doukhobor" after being arrested.[81] The implication in the lyrics is that Ferdinand may have been apprehended for some public display of nudity in Baltimore, Maryland. He attempted to escape punishment by stating he came from the Doukhobors of Canada. Unfortunately for Ferdinand, the American officers were unfamiliar with the group and were unmoved by Ferdinand's plea.[82]

Television

  • Woodcock, George (1976), The Doukhobors (film), CBC/NFB. Two parts: The Living Book and Toil and Peaceful Life.[83]

Notes

  1. ^ Nikifor was styled "Archbishop of Slavyansk and Kherson" (Славенский и Херсонский), while his successor, who was also called Ambrosius, was "Archbishop of Yekaterinoslav and Kherson" because the diocese was renamed in 1786.[17] The seat of the archbishops was in Poltava.
  2. ^ Not until 1918 did Peter Makaroff become the "first Doukhobor in the world to get an education, to receive a university degree, and to enter a profession".[35]

References

  1. ^ a b Magocsi, Paul Robert, ed. (1999). Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples. pp. 422–434.
  2. ^ "Lib.ru/Классика: Новицкий О. М.. Духоборцы". az.lib.ru. from the original on November 5, 2011. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  3. ^ "Peel 4372: Bonch-Bruevich, Vladimir Dmitrievich, Dukhobortsy v Kanadskikh preriiakh (1918)". peel.library.ualberta.ca. from the original on January 16, 2022. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  4. ^ "Dukhobor | Russian religious sect". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on October 22, 2020. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Makarova, Veronika (October 1, 2013). Russian Language Studies in North America: New Perspectives from Theoretical and Applied Linguistics. Anthem Press. p. 247. ISBN 978-1-78308-046-5. from the original on January 16, 2022. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  6. ^ Sainsbury, Brendan. "Canada's little-known Russian sect". www.bbc.com. Retrieved January 4, 2023.
  7. ^ a b Pinkerton, Robert (1833), Russia: or, Miscellaneous Observations on the Past and Present State of that Country and its Inhabitants, from the original on December 31, 2018, retrieved January 23, 2020
  8. ^ Sussex, R. (1993), "Slavonic Languages in Emigration", in Comrie, B.; Corbett, G.G. (eds.), The Slavonic Languages, Routledge.
  9. ^ "Doukhobors | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved January 4, 2023.
  10. ^ "Civilization.ca - Doukhobors - Food for the Body". www.historymuseum.ca. from the original on December 4, 2018. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  11. ^ "Doukhobor Cuisine - Pyrahi". www.usccdoukhobors.org. from the original on March 31, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  12. ^ "Bread Salt and Water". usccdoukhobors.org. from the original on November 15, 2019. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Campos, Élisabeth (2005). [The Doukhobors, "Spirit Fighters"] (in French). ERTA TCRG. Archived from the original on December 27, 2019. Retrieved January 12, 2008.
  14. ^ "Духоборцы", Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary [Doukhobortsy] (in Russian), from the original on April 2, 2008, retrieved January 12, 2008
  15. ^ Gentes, Andrew Armand (1999). "Larry Ewashen and Koozma J. Tarasoff, "In Search of Utopia: The Doukhobors"". Canadian Slavonic Papers. 41 (3): 458. from the original on January 16, 2022. Retrieved January 15, 2022 – via ProQuest.
  16. ^ a b Inikova, Svetlana A. (October 22–24, 1999), Spiritual Origins and the Beginnings of Doukhobor History, Doukhobor Centenary Conference, University of Ottawa, from the original on March 18, 2016, retrieved July 28, 2016; Doukhobor Genealogy Website (www.doukhobor.org).
  17. ^ "H Orthodox Russian Ekater", Hierarchy (in Russian), RU: Religare, from the original on February 1, 2009, retrieved January 12, 2008
  18. ^ a b c Peretitskaya, Victoria I. (April 2014). "RUSSIAN DOUKHOBORS AT THE PEACE CONFERENCE IN VANCOUVER, CANADA, 1958" (PDF). Art and Literature Scientific and Analytical Journal Texts: 111–119. (PDF) from the original on January 16, 2022. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d Woodcock, George; Avakumovic, Ivan (January 1, 1977). The Doukhobors. McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 36–356. ISBN 978-0-7735-9554-5. from the original on January 16, 2022. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  20. ^ Kalmakoff, Jonathan. "The Hyas Doukhobour Settlement" (PDF). Saskatchewan History. 59 (2): 1. (PDF) from the original on January 16, 2022. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  21. ^ a b c Kalmakoff, Jonathan (2019). "Ulichnye Familii among Doukhobors of the Caucasus and Canada". Onomastica (in Polish). 63: 67–114. doi:10.17651/ONOMAST.63.5. ISSN 2658-2783. S2CID 213418831. from the original on November 30, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  22. ^ "Doukhobor Memorial Stone from the Village of Bogdanovka". Doukhobor Heritage. January 25, 2020. Retrieved March 10, 2022.
  23. ^ Breyfogle, Nicholas B. (1995). "Building Doukhoboriia: religious culture, social identity and Russian colonization in Transcaucasia, 1845-1895". Canadian Ethnic Studies. 27 (3): 46. ProQuest 1293167920 – via ProQuest.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Shubin, Daniel H. (2006). A History of Russian Christianity. Vol. III. Algora. pp. 141–48. ISBN 978-0-87586-427-3. from the original on July 7, 2014. Retrieved September 21, 2016 – via Google Books.
  25. ^ Kalmakoff, Jonathan J. "Doukhobor Historical Maps: Doukhobors Settlements in the Georgian Republic". Doukhobor Genealogy. from the original on March 19, 2016. Retrieved July 28, 2016..
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lohm, Hedwig (November 2006). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 2, 2010.
  27. ^ McCormick, P.L. (1978). "The Doukhobors in 1904" (PDF). Saskatchewan History. 31 (1): 12–19. (PDF) from the original on October 29, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  28. ^ Pozdnyakov, Vasily Nikolaevich (В. Поздняков) (1900s). Правда о духоборах в Закавказье и в Сибири [The Truth about the Doukhobors in Transcaucasia and Siberia] (in Russian). VG and AK Chertkov (published 1914)., quoted in Golinenko, O.A. (ОА Голиненко). Вопросы Л.Н. Толстого Духобору [Leo Tolstoy's questions to a Doukhobor] (in Russian). from the original on April 9, 2008. Retrieved January 15, 2008.
  29. ^ Tarasoff, Koozma J. (2015). Doukhobor Nonkilling Legacy (PDF). Center for Global Nonkilling. p. 187. (PDF) from the original on March 24, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  30. ^ Kalmakoff, Jonathan J. "Index to Doukhobor Ship Passenger Lists". Doukhobor Genealogy Website (www.doukhobor.org). from the original on February 25, 2016. Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  31. ^ a b Ashworth, John (1900). "Doukhobortsy and Religious Persecution in Russia". Doukhobor Genealogy Website (www.doukhobor.org). from the original on March 18, 2016. Retrieved July 28, 2016..
  32. ^ Kalmakoff, Jonathan. "Researching Your Russian Doukhobor Roots" (PDF). Doukhobor Genealogy Website. p. 30. (PDF) from the original on March 18, 2016. Retrieved April 6, 2017.
  33. ^ Adelman, Jeremy (1990–1991). "Early Doukhobor Experience on the Canadian Prairies". Canadian Ethnic Studies. 25 (4). from the original on March 18, 2016. Retrieved July 28, 2016 – via Doukhobor Genealogy Website (www.doukhobor.org)..
  34. ^ Thorsteinson 1917.
  35. ^ Josephson, Harold (1985). Biographical Dictionary of Modern Peace Leaders. Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing. pp. 594–596. ISBN 0-313-22565-6.
  36. ^ a b Makarova, Veronika (2013). "Doukhobor 'freedom seeker' nudism: Exploring the sociocultural roots". Culture and Religion. 14 (2): 131–145. doi:10.1080/14755610.2012.706228. S2CID 145269278.
  37. ^ a b c d e Hardwick, Susan Wiley (1993). "The Doukhobors". Russian Refuge: Religion, Migration, and Settlement on the North American Pacific Rim. University of Chicago Press. pp. 80–. ISBN 0-226-31610-6. from the original on November 14, 2012. Retrieved September 21, 2016 – via Google Books.
  38. ^ a b c Kalmakoff, Jonathan J. "Doukhobor Historical Maps: Saskatchewan". Doukhobor Genealogy. from the original on March 19, 2016. Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  39. ^ McCormick, P. L. (1978). "The Doukhobors in 1904". Saskatchewan History. 31 (1): 12–19.
  40. ^ Thorsteinson 1917, pp. 24–30.
  41. ^ Lyons, John E. (1991). "Toil and a Peaceful Life: Peter V. Verigen and Doukhobor Education". Communal Societies. 11: 78–92.
  42. ^ Androsoff, Ashleigh (2007). "A Larger Frame: 'Redressing' The Image Of Doukhobor-Canadian Women in the Twentieth Century". Journal of the Canadian Historical Association. 18 (1): 81–105. doi:10.7202/018255ar.
  43. ^ Thorsteinson 1917, pp. 19–23.
  44. ^ Report of Royal Commission on matters relating to the sect of Doukhobors in the province of British Columbia, CA: SFU, 1912[dead link]
  45. ^ "USCC Doukhobors: Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ". from the original on February 8, 2008. Retrieved January 17, 2008.
  46. ^ a b Hannant, Larry (October–November 2004). "The Mysterious Death of Peter Verigin". Beaver. Vol. 84, no. 5. pp. 26–28.
  47. ^ McLaren, John (1995). "Wrestling spirits: The strange case of Peter Verigin II". Canadian Ethnic Studies. 27 (3): 95–130.
  48. ^ Simma Holt, Terror in the Name of God (McClelland and Stewart, 1964) is a study of the Sons of Freedom
  49. ^ "The lost children of British Columbia". from the original on November 25, 2020. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  50. ^ Kryak, Violetta (September 9, 2018). "B.C. government reconsiders apology for Doukhobor children taken from their families in 1950s". The Globe and Mail. from the original on November 9, 2020. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  51. ^ "Bomb Blasts Rail Bridge in Kootenay". The Spokesman-Review. December 11, 1961. from the original on February 27, 2021. Retrieved October 4, 2010.
  52. ^ Torrance, Judy (1988). Public Violence in Canada, 1867–1982. McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 34. ISBN 0-7735-0666-7.
  53. ^ Tarasoff, Koozma (1982). Plakun Trava, The Doukhobors. Mir Publication Society. p. 133. ISBN 0-920046-05-3.
  54. ^ Kalmakoff, Jonathan J. "Doukhobor Historical Maps". Doukhobor Genealogy. from the original on March 19, 2016. Retrieved July 28, 2016.
  55. ^ Chertkov 1911.
  56. ^ a b Peacock 1970.
  57. ^ "Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ". Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ.
  58. ^ "USCC Doukhobors". from the original on February 8, 2008. Retrieved January 17, 2008.
  59. ^ a b "Religion", Census Data 2011, Canada, May 8, 2013, from the original on November 2, 2013, retrieved November 2, 2013. The census numbers are actually based on extrapolating a 20% sample.
  60. ^ a b c Postnikoff, John I. (May 1978) [1977]. "Doukhobors: An Endangered Species". MIR magazine. No. 16. Grand Forks, BC: MIR Publication Society. from the original on April 16, 2008. Retrieved January 18, 2008 – via Doukhobor Genealogy Website (www.doukhobor.org).
  61. ^ Tarasoff 2002.
  62. ^ Inikova, Svetlana. "Spiritual Origins and the Beginning of Doukhobor History". Doukhobor Heritage. Jonathan Kalmakoff. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  63. ^ Fleming, John A.; Rowan, Michael J.; Chambers, James Albert (2004). Folk Furniture of Canada's Doukhobors, Hutterites, Mennonites and Ukrainians. University of Alberta. p. 4. ISBN 9780888644183. The English Quakers, who had made contact with the Doukhobors earlier, as well as the Philadelphia Society of Friends, also determined to help with their emigration from Russia to some other country—the only action which seemed possible.
  64. ^ Dyck, Cornelius J.; Martin, Dennis D. The Mennonite Encyclopedia. Mennonite Brethren Publishing House. p. 107.
  65. ^ Fahlbusch, Erwin (February 14, 2008). The Encyclodedia of Christianity. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 208. ISBN 9780802824172. The only contact with Mennonites was the period 1802–41 when they lived in the Molotschna, where Johann Cornies (q.v.) rendered them considerable assistance.
  66. ^ Doukhobor Suspension Bridgey. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
  67. ^ Doukhobor Discovery Center, from the original on January 6, 2008, retrieved January 14, 2008
  68. ^ Jackson, Kristin (July 10, 2010). "Doukhobor heritage lives on in southeast BC". The Seattle Times. from the original on September 14, 2010. Retrieved October 6, 2010.
  69. ^ "Hardy Mountain Doukhobor Village Historic Site", , BC, CA, archived from the original on October 18, 2007
  70. ^ The Doukhobors: "Spirit Wrestlers", Canada: Museum of Civilization, September 7, 1998, from the original on April 4, 2004, retrieved April 13, 2004
  71. ^ Tarasoff, Koozma J. (January 1, 1972). "Doukhobors - Their Migration Experience". Canadian Ethnic Studies. 4 (1): 1–2 – via ProQuest.
  72. ^ Palmieri, Aurelio (January 1915). "The Russian Doukhobors and their Religious Teachings". Harvard Theological Review. 8 (1): 65–66. doi:10.1017/S0017816000008324. ISSN 1475-4517. S2CID 154439550.
  73. ^ a b Schaarschmidt, Gunter (March 1, 2008). "The Ritual Language of the British Columbia Doukhobors as an Endangered Functional Style: Issues of Interference and Translatability". Canadian Slavonic Papers. 50 (1–2): 101–105. doi:10.1080/00085006.2008.11092575. ISSN 0008-5006. S2CID 194016348.
  74. ^ Tiflis Governorate was in Georgia, it is ethnic Armenians who populated its Samtskhe-Javakheti area, where the Doukhobor villages were
  75. ^ Breyfogle, Nicholas B. (January 1, 1995). "Building Doukhoboriia: religious culture, social identity and Russian colonization in Transcaucasia, 1845-1895". Canadian Ethnic Studies. 27 (3): 24. from the original on February 19, 2022. Retrieved February 19, 2022 – via ProQuest.
  76. ^ Voisey, Paul (1998). "Toil and Peaceful Life': Doukhobor Village Settlement in Saskatchewan, 1899–1918 by Carl J. Tracie (review)". Canadian Historical Review. 79 (2): 368–369. ISSN 1710-1093.
  77. ^ Dr. John I. Postnikoff Doukhobors: An Endangered Species April 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine MIR magazine, No. 16 (Grand Forks, BC: MIR Publication Society, May 1978) (Doukhobor Genealogy Website).
  78. ^ a b Schaarschmidt, Gunter (January 1, 1995). "Aspects of the history of Doukhobor Russian". Canadian Ethnic Studies. 27 (3): 197. from the original on February 19, 2022. Retrieved February 19, 2022 – via ProQuest.
  79. ^ Parry, Nerys (December 18, 2011). . Archived from the original on March 13, 2013. Retrieved January 7, 2012..
  80. ^ Wiersema, Robert J. (January 5, 2008). . Vancouver Sun. Archived from the original on January 8, 2008..
  81. ^ "Ferdinand the Imposter lyrics". from the original on August 16, 2014. Retrieved August 27, 2014.
  82. ^ "Sadavid: Ferdinand the Imposter". theband.hiof.no. from the original on October 29, 2016. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  83. ^ "Lost Childhood: Doukhobors". 16:9. Global Television. Retrieved March 10, 2013.[permanent dead link]

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWood, James, ed. (1907). "Doukhobours". The Nuttall Encyclopædia. London and New York: Frederick Warne.

Bibliography

  • Chertkov, Vladimir (1911). "Doukhobors" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 448–49.
  • Elkinton, Joseph, The Doukhobors: their history in Russia; their migration to Canada.
  • Friesen, John W; Verigin, Michael M, The Community Doukhobors: A People in Transition.
  • Hamm, James 'Jim' (2002), Spirit Wrestlers (documentary video) about the Freedomite Doukhobors.
  • Hawthorn, Harry B, The Doukhobors of British Columbia.
  • Holt, Simma. Terror in the Name of God The Story of the Sons of Freedom Doukhobors (McClelland and Stewart, 1964)
  • Peacock, Kenneth, ed. (1970), Songs of the Doukhobors: An Introductory Outline (PDF), National Museums of Canada Bulletin No. 231, Folklore Series No. 7, translated by E. A. Popoff (song texts), Ottawa: The National Museums of Canada; Queen's Printer of Canada[permanent dead link]
  • Tarasoff, Koozma J, Plakun Trava: The Doukhobors.
  • Tarasoff, Koozma J. "Doukbhobors" in Paul Robert Magocsi, ed., Encyclopedia of Canada's Peoples (1999) pp 422–34
  • ——— (2002), "Overview", Spirit Wrestlers: Doukhobor Pioneers' Strategies for Living, Ottawa: Legas (published 2006), ISBN 1-896031-12-9.
  • Tarasoff, Koozma J.; Klymasz, Robert B. (1995), Spirit Wrestlers: centennial papers in honour of Canada's Doukhobor Heritage, ISBN 0-660-14034-9.
  • Thorsteinson, Elina (1917). "The Doukhobors in Canada". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 4 (1): 3–48. doi:10.2307/1886809. JSTOR 1886809.
  • Woodcock, George; Avakumovic, Ivan, The Doukhobors.
  • Makarova V. (2012). The use of Russian in contemporary Doukhobor prayer service. In: International scientific research Internet conference "Current issues in philology and methods of teaching foreign languages", February 1–29, 2012, Novosibirsk, Russia. Международнaя научно-практическая Интернет-конференция «Актуальные проблемы филологии и методики преподавания иностранных языков», 1 февраля - 29 февраля 2012 года; http://ffl.nspu.net/?p=144 December 4, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Makarova V. A., Usenkova, E.V., Evdokimova, V.V. Evgrafova, K. V. (2011). The Language of Saskatchewan Doukhobors: Introduction to analysis. Izvestija Vysshix uchebnyx zavedenij [The News of Higher Schools]. Serija Gumanitarnyje nauki [Humanities]. Razdel Lingvistika [Linguistics section]. Vol 2 (2), pp. 146–151. http://www.isuct.ru/e-publ/gum/ru/2011/t02n02/philology-and-linguistics March 16, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • Schaarschmidt Gunter (University of Victoria, Canada) Four norms – one culture: Doukhobor Russian in Canada
  • Schaarschmidt, G. (2012). Russian language history in Canada. Doukhobor internal and external migrations: effects on language development and structure. In: V. Makarova (Ed), Russian Language Studies in North America: the New Perspectives from Theoretical and Applied Linguistics . London/New York: Anthem Press. pp. 235–260. www.anthempress.com

Further reading

  • Burnham, Dorothy K (1986), Unlike the Lilies: Doukhobor Textile Traditions in Canada, Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Royal Ontario Museum, ISBN 0-88854-322-0.
  • Cran, Gregory J. Negotiating Buck Naked: Doukhobors, Public Policy, and Conflict Resolution (UBC Press, 2006) 180 pp. deals only with the Sons of Freedom.
  • Donskov, Andrew; Woodsworth, John; Gaffield, Chad (2000), The Doukhobor Centenary in Canada: A Multi-Disciplinary Perspective on Their Unity and Diversity, Slavic Research Group at the University of Ottawa, ISBN 0-88927-276-X.
  • Holt, Simma (1964), Terror in the Name of God: The story of the Sons of Freedom Doukhobors, Toronto/Montreal: McClelland & Stewart.
  • Janzen, William (1990), Limits on Liberty: The Experience of Mennonite, Hutterite, and Doukhobor Communities in Canada, Toronto: U of Toronto Press, ISBN 0-8020-2731-8.
  • Kalmakoff, Jonathan. "The Hyas Doukhobour Settlement", Saskatchewan History (2007) 59#2 pp 27–34. covers 1902 to 1907.
  • Livanov, Feodor Vasilyevich, Early Dukhabors February 19, 2022, at the Wayback Machine, English translation by Daniel H. Shubin, 2021. ISBN 9781300342557
  • Makarova, V (2013), Doukhobor nudism: exploring the socio-cultural roots. Culture and Religion.
  • ——— (February 1–29, 2012), "The use of Russian in contemporary Doukhobor prayer service", Международнaя научно-практическая Интернет-конференция "Актуальные проблемы филологии и методики преподавания иностранных языков", 1 февраля – 29 февраля 2012 года [Current issues in philology and methods of teaching foreign languages] (International scientific research Internet conference), Novosibirsk, Russia, from the original on December 4, 2012, retrieved June 18, 2012
  • Makarova, VA; Usenkova, EV; Evdokimova, VV; Evgrafova, KV (2011), "The Language of Saskatchewan Doukhobors: Introduction to analysis. Izvestija Vysshix uchebnyx zavedenij [The News of Higher Schools]. Serija Gumanitarnyje nauki [Humanities]. Razdel Lingvistika [Linguistics section]", Philology & Linguistics, RU: ISUCT, 2 (2): 146–51, from the original on March 16, 2016, retrieved June 18, 2012.
  • Maude, Aylmer (1905), A Peculiar People: the Doukhobors, Constable, London.
  • Mealing, Francis Mark (1975), Doukhobor Life: A Survey of Doukhobor Religion, History, & Folklife, Kootenay Doukhobor Historical Society.
  • Morrell, Kathy. "The Life of Peter P. Verigin." Saskatchewan History (2009) 61#1 pp 26–32. covers 1928 to 1939.
  • O'Neail, Hazel (1994), Doukhobor Daze, Surrey, BC: Heritage House, ISBN 1-895811-22-8.
  • Rak, Julie (2004), Negotiated Memory: Doukhobor Autobiographical Discourse, Vancouver: UBC Press, ISBN 0-7748-1030-0.
  • Rozinkin, W. M. The Doukhobor Saga. [Nelson, B.C.: News Publishing Co.], 1974.
  • Schaarschmidt, G. 2012. Russian language history in Canada. Doukhobor internal and external migrations: effects on language development and structure. In: V. Makarova (Ed), Russian Language Studies in North America: the New Perspectives from Theoretical and Applied Linguistics. London/New York: Anthem Press.pp 235–260. www.anthempress.com
  • Sorokin, Stephan Sebastian, and Steve Lapshinoff. Doukhobor Problem. Crescent Valley, B.C.: Steve Lapshinoff, 1990.
  • Tarasoff, Koozma J (1977), Traditional Doukhobor Folkways: An Ethnographic and Biographic Record of Prescribed Behaviour, Mercury, Ottawa: National Museums of Canada.
  • Tracie, Carl. Toil and Peaceful Life: Doukhobor Village Settlement in Saskatchewan, 1899–1918. Regina: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina, 1996. ISBN 0-88977-100-6
  • Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ. Hospitality: Vegetarian Cooking the Doukhobor Way. Grand Forks, B.C.: USCC Centennial Cookbook Committee, 2003. ISBN 0-9732514-0-9
  • Woodsworth, John. Russian Roots and Canadian Wings: Russian Archival Documents on the Doukhobor Emigration to Canada. Canada/Russia series, v. 1. [Manotick, Ont.]: Penumbra Press, 1999. ISBN 0-921254-89-X
  • Shulgan, Christopher (June 12, 2008). "How the Doukhobors brought democracy to the USSR". The Walrus. from the original on September 19, 2021. Retrieved September 19, 2021.

External links

  • Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ (USCC) — Doukhobors
  • Doukhobor Heritage - the oldest, largest and most comprehensive website about Doukhobors.
  • Doukhobor Heritage website (Doukhobor genealogy and history), Canada"
  • "Explosion on the Kettle Valley Line: The Death of Peter Verigin", Great Unsolved Mysteries in Canadian History
  • Doukhobor Discovery Centre, Castlegar, British Columbia.
  • , archived from the original on April 3, 2005, prolific and well-known Doukhobor poet and hymnist..
  • "The Doukhobors Arrive in Canada", The Canadian Encyclopedia

doukhobors, doukhobours, dukhobors, russian, духоборы, духоборцы, romanized, dukhobory, dukhobortsy, spirit, warriors, wrestlers, spiritual, christian, ethnoreligious, group, russian, origin, they, known, their, pacifism, tradition, oral, history, hymn, singin. The Doukhobours or Dukhobors Russian duhobory duhoborcy romanized dukhobory dukhobortsy lit Spirit Warriors Wrestlers 2 3 4 5 are a Spiritual Christian ethnoreligious group of Russian origin They are known for their pacifism and tradition of oral history hymn singing and verse They reject the Russian Orthodox priesthood and associated rituals believing that personal revelation is more important than the Bible Facing persecution by the Russian government for their nonorthodox beliefs many migrated to Canada between 1899 and 1938 where most currently reside 6 DoukhoborsDoukhobour women 1887FounderSiluan Kolesnikov 17 1775 Regions with significant populationsCanada British Columbia etc 40 000 1 Southern Russia30 000ReligionsChristianity Spiritual Christianity Scripturesthe Book of Life a hymnal LanguagesSouth Russian EnglishRelated ethnic groupsRussiansWebsitewww wbr doukhobor wbr org uscc doukhobors org Doukhobors are often categorized as folk Protestants Spiritual Christians sectarians and heretics Among their core beliefs is the rejection of materialism They also reject the Russian Orthodox priesthood the use of icons and all associated church rituals Doukhobors believe the Bible alone is not enough to reach divine revelation 7 and that doctrinal conflicts can interfere with their faith Biblical teachings are evident in some published Doukhobor psalms hymns and beliefs The Doukhobors have a history dating back to at least 1701 although some scholars suspect the group has earlier origins 8 Doukhobors traditionally lived in their own villages and practiced communal living The term Spirit Wrestlers was originally used to disparage the group by the Russian Orthodox Church 9 Before 1886 the Doukhobors had a series of single leaders The origin of the Doukhobors is uncertain they first appear in first written records from 1701 The Doukhobors traditionally ate bread and borsch 10 11 Some of their food related religious symbols are bread salt and water 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Transcaucasian exile 1 2 Religious revival and crises 1 3 Migration to Canada 1 4 First emigrants 1 5 Canadian prairies 1 5 1 Popular distrust 1 5 2 Loss of land rights 1 6 Schism 1 7 British Columbia and Verigin s assassination 1 8 Nudism and arson 1 9 Doukhobors remaining in Russia 2 Hymnody 3 Population 3 1 Current population 3 2 Canada 3 3 Georgia and Russia 4 Ecumenical relations 5 Historical sites and museums 6 Linguistic history and dialect 6 1 Linguistic history 6 2 Features of the Doukhobor Russian dialect in Canada 7 In popular culture 7 1 Drama 7 2 Non fiction 7 3 Music 7 4 Television 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditIn the 17th and 18th century Russian Empire the first recorded Doukhobors concluded clergy and formal rituals are unnecessary believing in God s presence in every human being They rejected the secular government the Russian Orthodox priests icons all church rituals and the belief the Bible is a supreme source of divine revelation 7 The Doukhobors believed in the divinity of Jesus their practices emphasis on individual interpretation and opposition to the government and church provoked antagonism from the government and the established Russian Eastern Orthodox Church In 1734 the Russian government issued an edict against ikonobortsy those who reject icons condemning them as iconoclasts 13 The first known Doukhobor leader was Siluan Silvan Kolesnikov Russian Siluan Kolesnikov who was active from 1755 to 1775 Kolesnikov lived in the village Nikolskoye Yekaterinoslav Governorate in modern day south central Ukraine 13 Kolesnikov was familiar with the works of Western mystics such as Karl von Eckartshausen and Louis Claude de Saint Martin 14 The early Doukhobors called themselves God s People or Christians Their modern name first in the form Doukhobortsy Russian duhoborcy dukhobortsy Spirit wrestlers is thought to have been first used in 1785 or 1786 by Ambrosius the Archbishop of Yekaterinoslav 13 15 or his predecessor Nikifor Nikephoros Theotokis 16 a The archbishop s intent was to mock the Doukhobors as heretics fighting against the Holy Spirit Russian Svyatoj Duh Svyatoy Dukh but around the beginning of the 19th century according to SA Inikova 16 the dissenters adopted the name Doukhobors usually in a shorter form Doukhobory Russian duhobory dukhobory implying they are fighting alongside rather than against the Holy Spirit 13 18 The first known use of the spelling Doukhobor is in a 1799 government edict exiling 90 of the group to Finland 13 presumably the Vyborg area which was part of the Russian Empire at the time for producing anti war propaganda 19 The early Doukhobors were pacifists who rejected military institutions and war and were thus oppressed in Imperial Russia Both the tsarist state and church authorities were involved in the persecution and deprivation of the dissidents normal freedoms 20 In 1802 Tsar Alexander I encouraged the resettlement of religious minorities to the Milky Waters Molochnye Vody region around the Molochnaya River around Melitopol in modern day southern Ukraine This was motivated by the desire to quickly populate the rich steppe lands on the north shore of the Black and Azov Seas and to prevent the heretics from contaminating the population of the heartland with their ideas Many Doukhobors as well as Mennonites from Prussia accepted the Emperor s offer and travelled to the Molochnaya from other provinces of the Empire over the next 20 years 19 Transcaucasian exile Edit The village of Gorelovka in southern Georgia the capital of the Doukhobors of Transcaucasia 1893 The Doukhobor worship place in Georgia When Nicholas I succeeded Alexander as Tsar on February 6 1826 he issued a decree intending to force the assimilation of the Doukhobors through military conscription prohibiting their meetings and encouraging conversions to the established church 13 18 On October 20 1830 another decree followed specifying all able bodied members of dissenting religious groups engaged in propaganda against the established church should be conscripted and sent to the Russian army in the Caucasus while those not capable of military service and their women and children should be resettled in Russia s recently acquired Transcaucasian provinces With other dissenters around 5 000 Doukhobors were resettled in Georgia between 1841 and 1845 Akhalkalaki uyezd district in the Tiflis Governorate was chosen as the main place of their settlement 19 Doukhobor villages with Russian names appeared there Gorelovka Rodionovka Yefremovka Orlovka Spasskoye Dubovka Troitskoye and Bogdanovka Later other groups of Doukhobors were resettled by the government or migrated to Transcaucasia of their own accord They also settled in neighbouring areas including the Borchaly uyezd of Tiflis Governorate and the Kedabek uyezd of Elisabethpol Governorate 21 In 1844 Doukhobors who were being exiled from their home near Melitopol to the village of Bogdanovka carved the Doukhobor Memorial Stone which is now held in the collection of the Melitopol Museum of Local History 22 After Russia s conquest of Kars and the Treaty of San Stefano of 1878 some Dukhobors from Tiflis and Elisabethpol Governorates moved to the Zarushat and Shuragel uyezds of the newly created Kars Oblast to the north east of Kars in the modern day Republic of Turkey 23 The leader of the main group of Doukhobors who arrived in Transcaucasia from Ukraine in 1841 was Illarion Kalmykov Russian Illarion Kalmykov He died in the same year and was succeeded as the community leader by his son Peter Kalmykov 1864 After Peter Kalmykov s death in 1864 his widow Lukerya Vasilyevna Gubanova December 15 1886 Russian Lukerya Vasilevna Gubanova also known as Kalmykova took his leadership position 24 The Kalmykov dynasty lived in the village of Gorelovka a Doukhobor community in Georgia 25 21 Lukerya was respected by the provincial authorities who had to cooperate with the Doukhobors At the time of her death in 1886 there were around 20 000 Doukhobors in Transcaucasia By that time the region s Doukhobors had become vegetarian and were aware of Leo Tolstoy s philosophy which they found quite similar to their own traditional teachings 24 Religious revival and crises Edit The death of Lukerya who had no children was followed by a leadership crisis that divided the Dukhobortsy in the Caucasus into two major groups which disputed their next leader Lukerya wanted leadership to pass to her assistant Peter Vasilevich Verigin Although most of the community the Large Party Russian Bolshaya storona romanized Bolshaya Storona accepted him as the leader a minority faction known as the Small Party Malaya storona Malaya Storona rejected Verigin and sided with Lukerya s brother Michael Gubanov and the village elder Aleksei Zubkov 24 26 18 The Doukhobor village in Slavyanka Azerbaijan 2018 While the Large Party was a majority the Small Party had the support of the older members of the community and the local authorities On January 26 1887 at a community service at which the new leader was to be acclaimed police arrived and arrested Verigin He along with some of his associates was sent into internal exile in Siberia Large Party Doukhobors continued to consider Verigin their spiritual leader and to communicate with him by mail and via delegates who travelled to see him in Obdorsk 24 26 27 An isolated population of exiled Doukhobors a third party was about 5 000 miles 8 000 km east in Amur Oblast At the same time the Russian government applied greater pressure to enforce the Doukhobors compliance with its laws and regulations The Doukhobors had resisted registering marriages and births contributing grain to state emergency funds and swearing oaths of allegiance In 1887 Russia extended universal military conscription which applied to the rest of the empire to the Transcaucasian provinces While the Small Party cooperated with the state the Large Party reacting to the arrest of their leaders and inspired by their letters from exile 28 felt strengthened in their desire to abide by the righteousness of their faith Under instructions from Verigin the Large Party stopped using tobacco and alcohol divided their property equally among the members of the community and resolved to adhere to the practice of pacifism and non violence They refused to swear the oath of allegiance required in 1894 by the newly ascended Tsar Nicholas II 13 26 Under further instructions from Verigin about 7 000 of the most zealous Doukhobors about one third of all Doukhobors of the three Governorates of Transcaucasia destroyed their weapons and refused to serve in the military As the Doukhobors gathered to burn their guns on the night of June 28 29 July 10 11 Gregorian calendar 1895 while singing psalms and spiritual songs government Cossacks arrested and beat them Shortly after the government billeted Cossacks in many of the Large Party s villages around 4 000 Doukhobors were forced to disperse to villages in other parts of Georgia Many died of starvation and exposure 26 29 Migration to Canada Edit First emigrants Edit The port of Batumi as it was in 1881 Here the Doukhobors embarked on their transatlantic journey in 1898 and 1899 30 The resistance of the Doukhobors gained international attention and the Russian Empire was criticized for its treatment of this religious minority In 1897 the Russian government agreed to let the Doukhobors leave the country subject to conditions emigrants should never return emigrants must emigrate at their own expense community leaders currently in prison or exile in Siberia must serve the balance of their sentences before they could leave Russia 13 Emigrants initially attempted to settle in Cyprus Cyprus was at the time recognized as a possession of the Ottoman Empire but in the wake of the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 the Ottoman Empire had granted the United Kingdom the right to administer the island in exchange for support in its continuing conflict with the Russian Empire This fact made the potential settlement of the Russian Doukhobors a politically sensitive question among some in the British government but after Quaker supporters both made assurances of the Doukhobors political inoffensiveness and provided financial guarantees against their potential indigency officials permitted over 1 000 Doukhobors to establish farming settlements in several locations on the island beginning in the second half of 1898 However the Cyprus experiment soon proved to be disastrous beset by disease made worse by insufficient food that met the Doukhobors religious requirements as well as internal disagreements over community organization nearly ten percent of the colony died by early 1899 citation needed Canada offered more land transportation and aid to resettle in the Saskatchewan area Around 6 000 Doukhobors emigrated there in the first half of 1899 settling on land granted to them by the government in modern day Manitoba Saskatchewan and Alberta The Cyprus colony and others joined them and around 7 500 Russian Doukhobor emigrants about a third of their number in Russia arrived in Canada by the end of the year 31 Several smaller groups joined the main body of emigrants in later years coming directly from Transcaucasia and other places of exile 26 Among these latecomers were 110 leaders of the community who had to complete their sentences before being allowed to emigrate 31 By 1930 about 8 780 Doukhobors had migrated from Russia to Canada 32 The Quakers and Tolstoyan movement covered most of the costs of passage for the emigrants writer Leo Tolstoy arranged for the royalties from his novel Resurrection his story Father Sergei and some others to go to the emigration fund Tolstoy also raised money from wealthy friends his efforts provided about 30 000 rubles half of the emigration fund The anarchist Peter Kropotkin and professor of political economy at the University of Toronto James Mavor also helped the emigrants 33 34 The emigrants adapted to life in agricultural communes they were mostly of peasant origin and had low regard for advanced education b Many worked as loggers lumbermen and carpenters Eventually many left the communal dormitories and became private farmers on the Canadian plains Religious a cappella singing pacifism and passive resistance were markers of the sect One subgroup occasionally demonstrated naked typically as a protest against compulsory military service 36 Their policies made them controversial The modern descendants of the first wave of Doukhobor emigrants continue to live in southeastern British Columbia communities such as Krestova and in southern Alberta and Saskatchewan As of 1999 update the estimated population of Doukhobor descent in North America was 40 000 in Canada and about 5 000 in the United States 1 Canadian prairies Edit Vosnesenia Ascension village NE of Arran Saskatchewan North Colony A typical one street village modelled on those in the Old World In accordance with the Dominion Lands Act of 1872 for a nominal fee of 10 the Canadian government would grant 160 acres 0 65 km2 of land to any male homesteader who was able to establish a working farm on that land within three years Single family homesteads would not fit the Doukhobors communitarian tradition but a Hamlet Clause within the Act had been adopted 15 years earlier to accommodate other communitarian groups such as Mennonites The clause allowed beneficiaries of the Act to live in a hamlet within 3 miles 4 8 km from their land rather than on the land itself 37 This allowed the Doukhobors to establish a communal lifestyle similar to that of the Hutterites Also by passing Section 21 of the Dominion Military Act in late 1898 the Canadian Government exempted the Doukhobors from military service 37 The land for the Doukhobor immigrants in total 773 400 acres 3 130 km2 within what was to soon become the Province of Saskatchewan came in three block settlement areas or reserves and an annex 38 The North Colony also known as the Thunder Hill Colony or Swan River Colony in the Pelly and Arran districts of Saskatchewan became home to 2 400 Doukhobors from Tiflis Governorate who established 20 villages on 69 000 acres 280 km2 of the land grant The South Colony also known as the Whitesand Colony or Yorkton Colony in the Canora Veregin and Kamsack districts of Saskatchewan 3 500 Doukhobors from Tiflis Governorate Elisabethpol Governorate and Kars Oblast settled there in 30 villages on 215 010 acres 870 1 km2 of land grant The Good Spirit Lake Annex in the Buchanan district of Saskatchewan received 1 000 Doukhobors from Elisabethpol Governorate and Kars Oblast Russia and settled there in eight villages on 168 930 acres 683 6 km2 of land grant The annex was along the Good Spirit River which flows into Good Spirit Lake previously known as Devil s Lake The Saskatchewan Colony also known as the Rosthern Colony 37 Prince Albert Colony and Duck Lake Colony was located along North Saskatchewan River in the Langham and Blaine Lake districts of Saskatchewan north west of Saskatoon 1 500 Doukhobors from Kars Oblast settled there in 13 villages on 324 800 acres 1 314 km2 of land grant North and South Colonies and Good Spirit Lake Annex were located around Yorkton near the modern day border with Manitoba the Saskatchewan Rosthern Colony was located north west of Saskatoon a significant distance from the other three reserves citation needed In 1899 all four reserves formed part of the Northwest Territories Saskatchewan Rosthern Colony in the territories provisional District of Saskatchewan North Reserve straddled the boundary of Saskatchewan and Assiniboia districts and the other reserves were entirely in Assiniboia After the establishment of the Province of Saskatchewan in 1905 all reserves were located within that province citation needed Doukhobor women pulling a plow Thunder Hill Colony Manitoba Verigin persuaded his followers to free their animals and pull their wagons and plows themselves On the lands granted to them in the prairies the settlers established Russian style villages some of which received Russian names after settlers home villages in Transcaucasia for example Spasovka Large and Small Gorelovka and Slavianka while others gained more abstract spiritual names not common in Russia such as Uspeniye Dormition Terpeniye Patience Bogomdannoye Given by God and Osvobozhdeniye Liberation 38 The settlers found Saskatchewan winters much harsher than those in Transcaucasia and expressed disappointment the climate was not as suitable for growing fruits and vegetables Women greatly outnumbered the men many women worked on the farms tilling the land while many men took non farm jobs especially in railway construction 37 The earliest arrivals came from three backgrounds had varying commitments to communal life and lacked leadership Verigin arrived in December 1902 was recognized as the leader and reimposed communalism and self sufficiency The railway arrived in 1904 and hopes of isolation from Canadian society ended 39 40 Popular distrust Edit Canadians politicians and the media were deeply suspicious of the Doukhobors Their communal lifestyle seemed suspicious their refusal to send children to school was considered deeply troubling while pacifism caused anger during the First World War The Doukhobor faction known as Sons of Freedom conducted nude marches and carried out night time arson attacks which was considered unacceptable and offensive 41 Canadian magazines showed strong curiosity giving special attention to women s bodies and clothing Magazines and newspapers carried stories and photographs of Doukhobor women engaging in hard farm labour doing women s work wearing the traditional ethnic dress and in partial or total states of undress 42 Doukhobors received financial help from Quakers Clifford Sifton the Minister of the Interior wanted the Doukhobors in Canada he arranged financial subsidies to allow them to migrate 43 Loss of land rights Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Doukhobors news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Due to the community s aversion to private ownership of land Verigin had the land registered in the name of the community By 1906 the Canadian Government s new Minister of the Interior Frank Oliver started requiring the registration of land in the name of individual owners Many Doukhobors refused to comply resulting in 1907 in the reverting of more than a third 258 880 acres 1 047 7 km2 of Doukhobor lands back to the Crown The loss of legal title to their land became a major grievance Schism Edit Ten years after the Russian conscription crisis another political issue arose because the Doukhobors would have to become naturalized British citizens and swear an Oath of Allegiance to the British Crown something that had always been against their principles 44 The issue resulted in a three way split of the Doukhobor community in Canada 13 The edinolichniki Independents who in 1907 comprised 10 of the Canadian Doukhobors maintained their religion but abandoned communal ownership of land and rejected hereditary leadership and communal living as non essential to it The largest group the Community Doukhobors sometimes called orthodox Doukhobors continued to be loyal to their spiritual leader Peter V Verigin They formed the Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood CCUB which reformed in 1939 as the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ USCC 45 The more radical Sons of Freedom group originally Svobodniki sovereign people who were called Freedomites by the press emerged in 1903 they embraced Verigin s writings in such a zealous manner he banned them from his community Reporters often conflated them with law abiding Doukhobors and focused on their sensational behaviours citation needed Of these groupings the Independents integrated the most readily into Canadian capitalist society They had no problem registering their land groups and largely remained in Saskatchewan In 1939 they definitively rejected the authority of Peter Verigin s great grandson John J Verigin citation needed British Columbia and Verigin s assassination Edit In 1908 to remove his followers from the corrupting influence of non Doukhobors and edinolichniki individual owners Doukhobors and to find better conditions for agriculture Verigin bought large tracts of land in south eastern British Columbia His first purchase was around Grand Forks near the US border He later acquired large tracts of land further east in the Slocan Valley around Castlegar Between 1908 and 1912 about 8 000 people moved from Saskatchewan to these British Columbia lands to continue their communal way of living 38 In the milder climate of British Columbia the settlers were able to plant fruit trees and within a few years became renowned orchardists and producers of fruit preserves As the Community Doukhobors left Saskatchewan the reserves there were closed by 1918 Verigin Memorial On October 29 1924 Peter V Verigin was killed in a bomb explosion on a scheduled passenger train en route to British Columbia The government had initially stated the bombing was perpetrated by people within the Doukhobor community although no arrests were made because of the Doukhobors customary refusal to cooperate with Canadian authorities due to fear of intersect violence It is still unknown who was responsible for the bombing While the Doukhobors were initially welcomed by the Canadian government this assassination as well as Doukhobors beliefs regarding communal living their intolerance for schooling and other beliefs considered offensive or unacceptable created a decades long mistrust between government authorities and Doukhobors 46 Peter V Verigin s son Peter P Verigin who arrived from the Soviet Union in 1928 succeeded his father as leader of the Community Doukhobors He became known as Peter the Purger and worked to smooth relations between the Community Doukhobors and wider Canadian society The governments in Ottawa and the western provinces concluded he was the closet leader of the Sons of Freedom and was perhaps a dangerous Bolshevik The governments decided to deport him use the justice system to impose conformity to Canadian values on the Doukhobors and force them to abide by Canadian law and repudiate unacceptable practices With a legal defence managed by Peter Makaroff the deportation effort failed in 1933 47 The Sons of Freedom repudiated Verigin s policies as ungodly and assimilationist and escalated their protests The Sons of Freedom burnt Community Doukhobors property and organized more nude parades In 1932 the Parliament of Canada responded by criminalizing public nudity Over 300 radical Doukhobor men and women were arrested for this offence which typically carried a three year prison sentence 37 Nudism and arson Edit The Sons of Freedom used nudism and arson as visible methods of protest 48 They protested against materialism the land seizure by the government compulsory education in government schools and Verigin s assassination This led to many confrontations with the Canadian government and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police which continued into the 1970s Nudism was first used after the Doukhobors arrival in Canada 36 They used violence to fight modernity and destroyed threshing machines and other signs of modernity The group conducted night time arson attacks on schools built by the Doukhobor commune and Verigin s house 46 During 1947 and 1948 Sullivan s Royal Commission investigated acts of arson and bombing attacks in British Columbia and recommended several measures intended to integrate the Doukhobors into Canadian society notably through the education of their children in public schools Around that time the provincial government entered into direct negotiations with the Freedomite leadership W A C Bennett s Social Credit government which came to power in 1952 took a harder stance against the Doukhobor problem In 1953 174 children of the Sons of Freedom were forcibly interned by government agents in a residential school in New Denver British Columbia Abuse of the interned children was later alleged 49 50 In less than fifty years the Sons of Freedom committed 1 112 separate acts of violence and arson costing over 20 million in damages these acts include bombing and arson attacks on public schools bombings of Canadian railway bridges and tracks 51 the bombing of a courthouse at Nelson 52 and the destruction of a power transmission tower servicing East Kootenay district resulting in the loss of 1 200 jobs Many of the independent and community Doukhobors believed the Sons of Freedom s arson and bombings violated the Doukhobor central principle of nonviolence and that they did not deserve to be called Doukhobors 53 Doukhobors remaining in Russia Edit After the departure of the more zealous and uncompromising Doukhobors and many community leaders to Canada at the close of the Elisabethpol Governorate in the Caucasus Viceroyalty now Azerbaijan the former Doukhobor villages became mostly repopulated by Baptists Elsewhere some Doukhobors joined nearby Spiritual Christian groups 24 Those who remained Doukhobors were required to submit to the state Few protested against military service of 837 Russian court martial cases against conscientious objectors recorded between the beginning of World War I and April 1 1917 16 had Doukhobor defendants none of whom hailed from the Transcaucasian provinces 24 Between 1921 and 1923 Verigin s son Peter P Verigin arranged the resettlement of 4 000 Doukhobors from the Ninotsminda Bogdanovka district in south Georgia to Rostov Oblast in southern Russia and another 500 into Zaporizhzhia Oblast in Ukraine 26 54 The Soviet reforms greatly affected the lives of the Doukhobors both in their old villages in Georgia and in the new settlement areas in southern Russian and Ukraine State anti religious campaigns resulted in the suppression of Doukhobor religious tradition and the loss of books and archival records Many religious leaders were arrested or exiled for example 18 people were exiled from Gorelovka in 1930 26 Communists imposition of collective farming did not contradict the Doukhobor way of life Industrious Doukhobors made their collective farms prosperous often specializing in cheesemaking 26 Of the Doukhobor communities in the Soviet Union those in South Georgia were the most sheltered from outside influence because of their geographic isolation in mountainous terrain their location near the international border and concomitant travel restrictions for outsiders 26 Hymnody EditDoukhobor oral holy hymns which they call the Book of Life Russian Zhivotnaya kniga de facto replaced the written Bible Their teaching is founded on this tradition 55 56 The Book of Life of the Doukhobors 1909 is the first printed hymnal containing songs in the Southern Russian dialect which were composed to be sung aloud Their prayer meetings and gatherings are dominated by the singing of a cappella psalms hymns and spiritual songs 56 Population EditCurrent population Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Doukhobors news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 2001 an estimated 20 000 40 000 people of Doukhobor heritage lived in Canada 3 800 of whom claimed Doukhobor as their religious affiliation An estimated 30 000 people of Doukhobor heritage live in Russia and neighbouring countries In 2011 there were 2 290 persons in Canada who identified their religious affiliation as Doukhobor in Russia there were 50 such persons by the mid 2000s Canada Edit CCUB the Orthodox Doukhobors organization or Community Doukhobors was succeeded by the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ formed by Peter P Verigin Peter V Verigin s son in 1938 57 The largest and most active formal Doukhobor organization it is headquartered in Grand Forks British Columbia 58 During the Canada 2011 Census 59 2 290 persons in Canada of whom 1 860 in British Columbia 200 in Alberta 185 in Saskatchewan and 25 in Ontario identified their religious affiliation as Doukhobor The proportion of older people among these self identified Doukhobors is higher than among the general population Age groups Total 0 14 years 15 24 years 25 44 years 45 64 years 65 84 years 85 years and overAll Canadians 2001 29 639 035 5 737 670 3 988 200 9 047 175 7 241 135 3 337 435 287 415Self identified Doukhobors 2001 3 800 415 345 845 1 135 950 110Self identified Doukhobors 1991 4 820 510 510 1 125 1 400 1 175 100Twenty eight percent of the self identified Doukhobors in 2001 were over 65 born before 1936 as compared to 12 of the entire population of Canadian respondents The aging of the denomination is accompanied by its shrinkage starting in the 1960s 59 60 Census year Self identified Doukhobor population1921 12 6741931 14 9781941 16 8981951 13 1751961 13 2341971 9 1701981 g 28 1991 4 8202001 3 8002011 2 290The number of Canadians with Doukhobor heritage is much higher than the number of those who consider themselves members of this religion In 2012 Doukhobor researchers estimated there were over 20 000 people from Doukhobor stock in Canada 60 and over 40 000 Doukhobors by a wider definition of religion ethnicity way of life and social movement 61 page needed Canadian Doukhobors no longer live communally Doukhobors do not practice baptism They reject several items considered orthodox among Christian churches including church organization and liturgy the inspiration of the scriptures the literal interpretation of resurrection the literal interpretation of the Trinity and heaven and hell Some avoid the use of alcohol tobacco and animal products for food and eschew involvement in partisan politics Doukhobors believe in the goodness of man and reject the idea of original sin 62 Georgia and Russia Edit Peter Kalmykov s house in Gorelovka Georgia Since the late 1980s many of the Doukhobors of Georgia started emigrating to Russia Various groups moved to Tula Oblast Rostov Oblast Stavropol Krai and elsewhere After the 1991 independence of Georgia many villages with Russian names received Georgian names Bogdanovka became Ninotsminda Troitskoe became Sameba According to various estimates in Ninotsminda District the Doukhobor population fell from around 4 000 in 1979 to between 3 000 and 3 500 in 1989 and around 700 in 2006 In Dmanisi district it fell from around 700 Doukhobors in 1979 to no more than 50 by the mid 2000s Most of those who remain in Georgia are older people the younger generation found it easier to relocate to Russia The Doukhobor community of Gorelovka in Ninotsminda District the former capital of the Kalmykov family is thought to be the best preserved in all former Soviet Union countries 26 Ecumenical relations EditThe Doukhobors have maintained a close association with Mennonites and Quakers due to similar religious practices all of these groups are collectively considered to be peace churches due to their belief in pacifism 63 64 65 Historical sites and museums Edit Leo Tolstoy Statue at Doukhobor Discovery Centre In 1995 the Doukhobor Suspension Bridge spanning the Kootenay River was designated a National Historic Site of Canada 66 The site of Community Doukhobors headquarters in Veregin Saskatchewan was designated a National Historic Site in 2006 under the name Doukhobors at Veregin A Doukhobor museum currently known as Doukhobor Discovery Centre formerly Doukhobor Village Museum operates in Castlegar British Columbia It contains over 1 000 artifacts representing the arts crafts and daily lives of the Doukhobors of the Kootenays in 1908 38 67 68 Although most of the early Doukhobor village structures in British Columbia have vanished or been significantly remodelled by later users a part of Makortoff Village outside Grand Forks British Columbia has been preserved as a museum by Peter Gritchen who purchased the property in 1971 and opened it as Mountain View Doukhobor Museum on June 16 1972 The site s future became uncertain after his death in 2000 but in March 2004 in cooperation with local organizations and concerned citizens The Land Conservancy of British Columbia purchased the historical site known as Hardy Mountain Doukhobor Village while Boundary Museum Society acquired the museum collection and loaned it to TLC for display 69 The Canadian Museum of Civilization in Ottawa has a collection of Doukhobor related items A special exhibition there was run in 1998 99 to mark the centennial anniversary of the Doukhobor arrival in Canada 70 Linguistic history and dialect EditMain article Doukhobor Russian The Doukhobors took with them to Canada a Southern Russian dialect which in the following decades changed under the influence of Canadian English and the speech of the Ukrainian settlers in Saskatchewan Over several generations this dialect has been mostly lost because the modern descendants of the original Doukhobor migrants to Canada are typically native English speakers when they speak Russian it is typically a fairly standard variety 5 Linguistic history Edit In 1802 the Doukhobors and other spiritual Christian tribes were encouraged to migrate to the Molochna River region around Melitopol near Ukraine s Sea of Azov coast within the Pale of Settlement neighbouring settlements of anabaptists from Germany 19 71 Over the next 10 or 20 years the Doukhobors and others mostly speaking a variety of Southern Russian dialects arrived at the Molochna from several provinces most of which are located in modern day eastern Ukraine and south central Russia 72 In the settlers villages an opportunity for the formation of a dialect koine based on Southern Russian and Eastern Ukrainian dialects arose 5 73 Starting in 1841 the Doukhobors and others were resettled from southern Ukraine to Transcaucasia where they founded several villages surrounded by mostly non Russian speaking neighbours primarily Azerbaijanis in Elisabethpol Governorate Armenians 74 in Tiflis Governorate and likely a mix of both in the later post 1878 settlements in Kars Oblast These conditions allowed the dialect to develop in comparative isolation from mainstream Russian 5 With the migration of 7 500 Doukhbors from Transcaucasia to Saskatchewan in 1899 and some smaller latecomer groups from both Transcaucasia and from places of exile in Siberia and elsewhere the dialect spoken in the Doukhobor villages of Transcaucasia was taken to the plains of Canada From that point it experienced influence from Canadian English and during the years of Doukhobor stay in Saskatchewan the speech of their Ukrainian neighbours 5 75 76 A split in the Doukhobor community resulted in a large number of Doukhobors moving from Saskatchewan to south eastern British Columbia around 1910 Those who moved the so called Community Doukhobors followers of Peter Verigin s Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood continued living communally for several decades and had a better chance to preserve their Russian language than the Independent Doukhobors who stayed in Saskatchewan as individual farmers 5 By the 1970s as most Russian born members of the community died English became the first language of the great majority of Canadian Doukhobors 77 60 Their English speech is not noticeably different from that of other English speaking Canadians of their provinces Russian still remains in use at least for religious purposes among those who practice the Doukhobor religion 5 Features of the Doukhobor Russian dialect in Canada Edit Research into the Russian spoken by Canada s Doukhobors has not been extensive but several articles mostly published in the 1960s and 1970s noted a variety of features in Doukhobors Russian speech that were characteristic of Southern and in some cases Central Russian dialects for example use of the Southern h where Standard Russian has g 73 78 Features characteristic of many locales in the East Slavic language space were noted reflecting the heterogeneous origin of the Doukhobors settlements in Molochna River after 1800 for example like Belarusians Doukhobor speakers do not palatalize r in redko redko seldom Remarkable was the dropping of the final t in the third person singular form of verbs which can be considered a Ukrainian feature and is also attested in some Russian dialects spoken in Southern Ukraine e g Nikolaev near the Doukhobors former homeland on the Molochna As with other immigrant groups the Russian speech of the Doukhobors uses English loanwords for some concepts they had not encountered until moving to Canada 21 74 78 In popular culture EditA 1962 Eric Frank Russell science fiction novel The Great Explosion adapted and expanded from his 1951 novella And Then There Were None mentions the Doukhobors as a group of interstellar settlers on the planet Hygeia who had been marginalized by later naturist settlers Roy Gabrielle 1975 Hoodoo Valley Garden in the wind novel McClelland amp Stewart A Robert A Heinlein short story The Year of the Jackpot briefly mentions the Doukhobors as a group in Canada that practised nudity O Neail Hazel 1962 Doukhobor Daze Gray s Evergreen Parry Nerys 2011 Man and Other Natural Disasters Great Plains 79 Plotnikoff Vi 2001 Head Cook at Weddings and Funerals And Other Stories of Doukhobor Life novel Raincoast Books Stenson Bill 2007 Svoboda novel Thistledown Press ISBN 978 1 897235 30 0 80 Drama Edit Doukhobors 1970 Collective creation at Theatre Passe Muraille Non fiction Edit Marsden Philip 1998 The Spirit Wrestlers A Russian Odyssey HarperCollins Tarasoff Koozma J 2002 Spirit Wrestlers Doukhobor Pioneers Strategies for Living Legas Woodcock George Avakumovic Ivan 1977 The Doukhobors Carleton University Institute of Canadian Studies McClelland amp Stewart Wright James Wright Frederic Church 1940 Slava Bohu Farrar amp Rinehart Inc Music Edit Reynolds Malvina 1962 Do As the Doukhobors Do The Best of Broadside 1962 88 US originally The Doukhobor Do is about the Doukhobor nude protests The song was recorded by Pete Seeger In the bonus track Ferdinand the Imposter on the 2000 re issue of Music from Big Pink by the Canadian roots rock group The Band the title character claimed he was a Doukhobor after being arrested 81 The implication in the lyrics is that Ferdinand may have been apprehended for some public display of nudity in Baltimore Maryland He attempted to escape punishment by stating he came from the Doukhobors of Canada Unfortunately for Ferdinand the American officers were unfamiliar with the group and were unmoved by Ferdinand s plea 82 Television Edit Woodcock George 1976 The Doukhobors film CBC NFB Two parts The Living Book and Toil and Peaceful Life 83 Notes Edit Nikifor was styled Archbishop of Slavyansk and Kherson Slavenskij i Hersonskij while his successor who was also called Ambrosius was Archbishop of Yekaterinoslav and Kherson because the diocese was renamed in 1786 17 The seat of the archbishops was in Poltava Not until 1918 did Peter Makaroff become the first Doukhobor in the world to get an education to receive a university degree and to enter a profession 35 References Edit a b Magocsi Paul Robert ed 1999 Encyclopedia of Canada s Peoples pp 422 434 Lib ru Klassika Novickij O M Duhoborcy az lib ru Archived from the original on November 5 2011 Retrieved February 11 2021 Peel 4372 Bonch Bruevich Vladimir Dmitrievich Dukhobortsy v Kanadskikh preriiakh 1918 peel library ualberta ca Archived from the original on January 16 2022 Retrieved February 11 2021 Dukhobor Russian religious sect Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on October 22 2020 Retrieved February 11 2021 a b c d e f g Makarova Veronika October 1 2013 Russian Language Studies in North America New Perspectives from Theoretical and Applied Linguistics Anthem Press p 247 ISBN 978 1 78308 046 5 Archived from the original on January 16 2022 Retrieved January 15 2022 Sainsbury Brendan Canada s little known Russian sect www bbc com Retrieved January 4 2023 a b Pinkerton Robert 1833 Russia or Miscellaneous Observations on the Past and Present State of that Country and its Inhabitants archived from the original on December 31 2018 retrieved January 23 2020 Sussex R 1993 Slavonic Languages in Emigration in Comrie B Corbett G G eds The Slavonic Languages Routledge Doukhobors The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved January 4 2023 Civilization ca Doukhobors Food for the Body www historymuseum ca Archived from the original on December 4 2018 Retrieved May 2 2020 Doukhobor Cuisine Pyrahi www usccdoukhobors org Archived from the original on March 31 2020 Retrieved May 2 2020 Bread Salt and Water usccdoukhobors org Archived from the original on November 15 2019 Retrieved May 2 2020 a b c d e f g h i Campos Elisabeth 2005 Les Doukhobors Lutteurs de l esprit The Doukhobors Spirit Fighters in French ERTA TCRG Archived from the original on December 27 2019 Retrieved January 12 2008 Duhoborcy Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary Doukhobortsy in Russian archived from the original on April 2 2008 retrieved January 12 2008 Gentes Andrew Armand 1999 Larry Ewashen and Koozma J Tarasoff In Search of Utopia The Doukhobors Canadian Slavonic Papers 41 3 458 Archived from the original on January 16 2022 Retrieved January 15 2022 via ProQuest a b Inikova Svetlana A October 22 24 1999 Spiritual Origins and the Beginnings of Doukhobor History Doukhobor Centenary Conference University of Ottawa archived from the original on March 18 2016 retrieved July 28 2016 Doukhobor Genealogy Website www doukhobor org H Orthodox Russian Ekater Hierarchy in Russian RU Religare archived from the original on February 1 2009 retrieved January 12 2008 a b c Peretitskaya Victoria I April 2014 RUSSIAN DOUKHOBORS AT THE PEACE CONFERENCE IN VANCOUVER CANADA 1958 PDF Art and Literature Scientific and Analytical Journal Texts 111 119 Archived PDF from the original on January 16 2022 Retrieved January 15 2022 a b c d Woodcock George Avakumovic Ivan January 1 1977 The Doukhobors McGill Queen s University Press pp 36 356 ISBN 978 0 7735 9554 5 Archived from the original on January 16 2022 Retrieved January 15 2022 Kalmakoff Jonathan The Hyas Doukhobour Settlement PDF Saskatchewan History 59 2 1 Archived PDF from the original on January 16 2022 Retrieved January 15 2022 a b c Kalmakoff Jonathan 2019 Ulichnye Familii among Doukhobors of the Caucasus and Canada Onomastica in Polish 63 67 114 doi 10 17651 ONOMAST 63 5 ISSN 2658 2783 S2CID 213418831 Archived from the original on November 30 2020 Retrieved January 15 2022 Doukhobor Memorial Stone from the Village of Bogdanovka Doukhobor Heritage January 25 2020 Retrieved March 10 2022 Breyfogle Nicholas B 1995 Building Doukhoboriia religious culture social identity and Russian colonization in Transcaucasia 1845 1895 Canadian Ethnic Studies 27 3 46 ProQuest 1293167920 via ProQuest a b c d e f Shubin Daniel H 2006 A History of Russian Christianity Vol III Algora pp 141 48 ISBN 978 0 87586 427 3 Archived from the original on July 7 2014 Retrieved September 21 2016 via Google Books Kalmakoff Jonathan J Doukhobor Historical Maps Doukhobors Settlements in the Georgian Republic Doukhobor Genealogy Archived from the original on March 19 2016 Retrieved July 28 2016 a b c d e f g h i j Lohm Hedwig November 2006 Dukhobors in Georgia A Study of the Issue of Land Ownership and Inter Ethnic Relations in Ninotsminda rayon Samtskhe Javakheti PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 2 2010 McCormick P L 1978 The Doukhobors in 1904 PDF Saskatchewan History 31 1 12 19 Archived PDF from the original on October 29 2020 Retrieved January 15 2022 Pozdnyakov Vasily Nikolaevich V Pozdnyakov 1900s Pravda o duhoborah v Zakavkaze i v Sibiri The Truth about the Doukhobors in Transcaucasia and Siberia in Russian VG and AK Chertkov published 1914 quoted in Golinenko O A OA Golinenko Voprosy L N Tolstogo Duhoboru Leo Tolstoy s questions to a Doukhobor in Russian Archived from the original on April 9 2008 Retrieved January 15 2008 Tarasoff Koozma J 2015 Doukhobor Nonkilling Legacy PDF Center for Global Nonkilling p 187 Archived PDF from the original on March 24 2016 Retrieved January 15 2022 Kalmakoff Jonathan J Index to Doukhobor Ship Passenger Lists Doukhobor Genealogy Website www doukhobor org Archived from the original on February 25 2016 Retrieved July 28 2016 a b Ashworth John 1900 Doukhobortsy and Religious Persecution in Russia Doukhobor Genealogy Website www doukhobor org Archived from the original on March 18 2016 Retrieved July 28 2016 Kalmakoff Jonathan Researching Your Russian Doukhobor Roots PDF Doukhobor Genealogy Website p 30 Archived PDF from the original on March 18 2016 Retrieved April 6 2017 Adelman Jeremy 1990 1991 Early Doukhobor Experience on the Canadian Prairies Canadian Ethnic Studies 25 4 Archived from the original on March 18 2016 Retrieved July 28 2016 via Doukhobor Genealogy Website www doukhobor org Thorsteinson 1917 Josephson Harold 1985 Biographical Dictionary of Modern Peace Leaders Connecticut Greenwood Publishing pp 594 596 ISBN 0 313 22565 6 a b Makarova Veronika 2013 Doukhobor freedom seeker nudism Exploring the sociocultural roots Culture and Religion 14 2 131 145 doi 10 1080 14755610 2012 706228 S2CID 145269278 a b c d e Hardwick Susan Wiley 1993 The Doukhobors Russian Refuge Religion Migration and Settlement on the North American Pacific Rim University of Chicago Press pp 80 ISBN 0 226 31610 6 Archived from the original on November 14 2012 Retrieved September 21 2016 via Google Books a b c Kalmakoff Jonathan J Doukhobor Historical Maps Saskatchewan Doukhobor Genealogy Archived from the original on March 19 2016 Retrieved July 28 2016 McCormick P L 1978 The Doukhobors in 1904 Saskatchewan History 31 1 12 19 Thorsteinson 1917 pp 24 30 Lyons John E 1991 Toil and a Peaceful Life Peter V Verigen and Doukhobor Education Communal Societies 11 78 92 Androsoff Ashleigh 2007 A Larger Frame Redressing The Image Of Doukhobor Canadian Women in the Twentieth Century Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 18 1 81 105 doi 10 7202 018255ar Thorsteinson 1917 pp 19 23 Report of Royal Commission on matters relating to the sect of Doukhobors in the province of British Columbia CA SFU 1912 dead link USCC Doukhobors Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ Archived from the original on February 8 2008 Retrieved January 17 2008 a b Hannant Larry October November 2004 The Mysterious Death of Peter Verigin Beaver Vol 84 no 5 pp 26 28 McLaren John 1995 Wrestling spirits The strange case of Peter Verigin II Canadian Ethnic Studies 27 3 95 130 Simma Holt Terror in the Name of God McClelland and Stewart 1964 is a study of the Sons of Freedom The lost children of British Columbia Archived from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved December 9 2020 Kryak Violetta September 9 2018 B C government reconsiders apology for Doukhobor children taken from their families in 1950s The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on November 9 2020 Retrieved December 9 2020 Bomb Blasts Rail Bridge in Kootenay The Spokesman Review December 11 1961 Archived from the original on February 27 2021 Retrieved October 4 2010 Torrance Judy 1988 Public Violence in Canada 1867 1982 McGill Queen s University Press p 34 ISBN 0 7735 0666 7 Tarasoff Koozma 1982 Plakun Trava The Doukhobors Mir Publication Society p 133 ISBN 0 920046 05 3 Kalmakoff Jonathan J Doukhobor Historical Maps Doukhobor Genealogy Archived from the original on March 19 2016 Retrieved July 28 2016 Chertkov 1911 a b Peacock 1970 Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ USCC Doukhobors Archived from the original on February 8 2008 Retrieved January 17 2008 a b Religion Census Data 2011 Canada May 8 2013 archived from the original on November 2 2013 retrieved November 2 2013 The census numbers are actually based on extrapolating a 20 sample a b c Postnikoff John I May 1978 1977 Doukhobors An Endangered Species MIR magazine No 16 Grand Forks BC MIR Publication Society Archived from the original on April 16 2008 Retrieved January 18 2008 via Doukhobor Genealogy Website www doukhobor org Tarasoff 2002 Inikova Svetlana Spiritual Origins and the Beginning of Doukhobor History Doukhobor Heritage Jonathan Kalmakoff Retrieved July 22 2022 Fleming John A Rowan Michael J Chambers James Albert 2004 Folk Furniture of Canada s Doukhobors Hutterites Mennonites and Ukrainians University of Alberta p 4 ISBN 9780888644183 The English Quakers who had made contact with the Doukhobors earlier as well as the Philadelphia Society of Friends also determined to help with their emigration from Russia to some other country the only action which seemed possible Dyck Cornelius J Martin Dennis D The Mennonite Encyclopedia Mennonite Brethren Publishing House p 107 Fahlbusch Erwin February 14 2008 The Encyclodedia of Christianity Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 208 ISBN 9780802824172 The only contact with Mennonites was the period 1802 41 when they lived in the Molotschna where Johann Cornies q v rendered them considerable assistance Doukhobor Suspension Bridgey Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved November 13 2011 Doukhobor Discovery Center archived from the original on January 6 2008 retrieved January 14 2008 Jackson Kristin July 10 2010 Doukhobor heritage lives on in southeast BC The Seattle Times Archived from the original on September 14 2010 Retrieved October 6 2010 Hardy Mountain Doukhobor Village Historic Site Conservancy BC CA archived from the original on October 18 2007 The Doukhobors Spirit Wrestlers Canada Museum of Civilization September 7 1998 archived from the original on April 4 2004 retrieved April 13 2004 Tarasoff Koozma J January 1 1972 Doukhobors Their Migration Experience Canadian Ethnic Studies 4 1 1 2 via ProQuest Palmieri Aurelio January 1915 The Russian Doukhobors and their Religious Teachings Harvard Theological Review 8 1 65 66 doi 10 1017 S0017816000008324 ISSN 1475 4517 S2CID 154439550 a b Schaarschmidt Gunter March 1 2008 The Ritual Language of the British Columbia Doukhobors as an Endangered Functional Style Issues of Interference and Translatability Canadian Slavonic Papers 50 1 2 101 105 doi 10 1080 00085006 2008 11092575 ISSN 0008 5006 S2CID 194016348 Tiflis Governorate was in Georgia it is ethnic Armenians who populated its Samtskhe Javakheti area where the Doukhobor villages were Breyfogle Nicholas B January 1 1995 Building Doukhoboriia religious culture social identity and Russian colonization in Transcaucasia 1845 1895 Canadian Ethnic Studies 27 3 24 Archived from the original on February 19 2022 Retrieved February 19 2022 via ProQuest Voisey Paul 1998 Toil and Peaceful Life Doukhobor Village Settlement in Saskatchewan 1899 1918 by Carl J Tracie review Canadian Historical Review 79 2 368 369 ISSN 1710 1093 Dr John I Postnikoff Doukhobors An Endangered Species Archived April 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine MIR magazine No 16 Grand Forks BC MIR Publication Society May 1978 Doukhobor Genealogy Website a b Schaarschmidt Gunter January 1 1995 Aspects of the history of Doukhobor Russian Canadian Ethnic Studies 27 3 197 Archived from the original on February 19 2022 Retrieved February 19 2022 via ProQuest Parry Nerys December 18 2011 Straddling the divides fact fiction and Freedomites Archived from the original on March 13 2013 Retrieved January 7 2012 Wiersema Robert J January 5 2008 Doukhobor novel does more than tell a good story Vancouver Sun Archived from the original on January 8 2008 Ferdinand the Imposter lyrics Archived from the original on August 16 2014 Retrieved August 27 2014 Sadavid Ferdinand the Imposter theband hiof no Archived from the original on October 29 2016 Retrieved December 18 2016 Lost Childhood Doukhobors 16 9 Global Television Retrieved March 10 2013 permanent dead link This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Wood James ed 1907 Doukhobours The Nuttall Encyclopaedia London and New York Frederick Warne Bibliography EditChertkov Vladimir 1911 Doukhobors In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 448 49 Elkinton Joseph The Doukhobors their history in Russia their migration to Canada Friesen John W Verigin Michael M The Community Doukhobors A People in Transition Hamm James Jim 2002 Spirit Wrestlers documentary video about the Freedomite Doukhobors Hawthorn Harry B The Doukhobors of British Columbia Holt Simma Terror in the Name of God The Story of the Sons of Freedom Doukhobors McClelland and Stewart 1964 Peacock Kenneth ed 1970 Songs of the Doukhobors An Introductory Outline PDF National Museums of Canada Bulletin No 231 Folklore Series No 7 translated by E A Popoff song texts Ottawa The National Museums of Canada Queen s Printer of Canada permanent dead link Tarasoff Koozma J Plakun Trava The Doukhobors Tarasoff Koozma J Doukbhobors in Paul Robert Magocsi ed Encyclopedia of Canada s Peoples 1999 pp 422 34 2002 Overview Spirit Wrestlers Doukhobor Pioneers Strategies for Living Ottawa Legas published 2006 ISBN 1 896031 12 9 Tarasoff Koozma J Klymasz Robert B 1995 Spirit Wrestlers centennial papers in honour of Canada s Doukhobor Heritage ISBN 0 660 14034 9 Thorsteinson Elina 1917 The Doukhobors in Canada Mississippi Valley Historical Review 4 1 3 48 doi 10 2307 1886809 JSTOR 1886809 Woodcock George Avakumovic Ivan The Doukhobors Makarova V 2012 The use of Russian in contemporary Doukhobor prayer service In International scientific research Internet conference Current issues in philology and methods of teaching foreign languages February 1 29 2012 Novosibirsk Russia Mezhdunarodnaya nauchno prakticheskaya Internet konferenciya Aktualnye problemy filologii i metodiki prepodavaniya inostrannyh yazykov 1 fevralya 29 fevralya 2012 goda http ffl nspu net p 144 Archived December 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine Makarova V A Usenkova E V Evdokimova V V Evgrafova K V 2011 The Language of Saskatchewan Doukhobors Introduction to analysis Izvestija Vysshix uchebnyx zavedenij The News of Higher Schools Serija Gumanitarnyje nauki Humanities Razdel Lingvistika Linguistics section Vol 2 2 pp 146 151 http www isuct ru e publ gum ru 2011 t02n02 philology and linguistics Archived March 16 2016 at the Wayback Machine Schaarschmidt Gunter University of Victoria Canada Four norms one culture Doukhobor Russian in Canada Schaarschmidt G 2012 Russian language history in Canada Doukhobor internal and external migrations effects on language development and structure In V Makarova Ed Russian Language Studies in North America the New Perspectives from Theoretical and Applied Linguistics London New York Anthem Press pp 235 260 www anthempress comFurther reading EditBurnham Dorothy K 1986 Unlike the Lilies Doukhobor Textile Traditions in Canada Toronto Ontario Canada Royal Ontario Museum ISBN 0 88854 322 0 Cran Gregory J Negotiating Buck Naked Doukhobors Public Policy and Conflict Resolution UBC Press 2006 180 pp deals only with the Sons of Freedom Donskov Andrew Woodsworth John Gaffield Chad 2000 The Doukhobor Centenary in Canada A Multi Disciplinary Perspective on Their Unity and Diversity Slavic Research Group at the University of Ottawa ISBN 0 88927 276 X Holt Simma 1964 Terror in the Name of God The story of the Sons of Freedom Doukhobors Toronto Montreal McClelland amp Stewart Janzen William 1990 Limits on Liberty The Experience of Mennonite Hutterite and Doukhobor Communities in Canada Toronto U of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 2731 8 Kalmakoff Jonathan The Hyas Doukhobour Settlement Saskatchewan History 2007 59 2 pp 27 34 covers 1902 to 1907 Livanov Feodor Vasilyevich Early Dukhabors Archived February 19 2022 at the Wayback Machine English translation by Daniel H Shubin 2021 ISBN 9781300342557 Makarova V 2013 Doukhobor nudism exploring the socio cultural roots Culture and Religion February 1 29 2012 The use of Russian in contemporary Doukhobor prayer service Mezhdunarodnaya nauchno prakticheskaya Internet konferenciya Aktualnye problemy filologii i metodiki prepodavaniya inostrannyh yazykov 1 fevralya 29 fevralya 2012 goda Current issues in philology and methods of teaching foreign languages International scientific research Internet conference Novosibirsk Russia archived from the original on December 4 2012 retrieved June 18 2012 Makarova VA Usenkova EV Evdokimova VV Evgrafova KV 2011 The Language of Saskatchewan Doukhobors Introduction to analysis Izvestija Vysshix uchebnyx zavedenij The News of Higher Schools Serija Gumanitarnyje nauki Humanities Razdel Lingvistika Linguistics section Philology amp Linguistics RU ISUCT 2 2 146 51 archived from the original on March 16 2016 retrieved June 18 2012 Maude Aylmer 1905 A Peculiar People the Doukhobors Constable London Mealing Francis Mark 1975 Doukhobor Life A Survey of Doukhobor Religion History amp Folklife Kootenay Doukhobor Historical Society Morrell Kathy The Life of Peter P Verigin Saskatchewan History 2009 61 1 pp 26 32 covers 1928 to 1939 O Neail Hazel 1994 Doukhobor Daze Surrey BC Heritage House ISBN 1 895811 22 8 Rak Julie 2004 Negotiated Memory Doukhobor Autobiographical Discourse Vancouver UBC Press ISBN 0 7748 1030 0 Rozinkin W M The Doukhobor Saga Nelson B C News Publishing Co 1974 Schaarschmidt G 2012 Russian language history in Canada Doukhobor internal and external migrations effects on language development and structure In V Makarova Ed Russian Language Studies in North America the New Perspectives from Theoretical and Applied Linguistics London New York Anthem Press pp 235 260 www anthempress com Sorokin Stephan Sebastian and Steve Lapshinoff Doukhobor Problem Crescent Valley B C Steve Lapshinoff 1990 Tarasoff Koozma J 1977 Traditional Doukhobor Folkways An Ethnographic and Biographic Record of Prescribed Behaviour Mercury Ottawa National Museums of Canada Tracie Carl Toil and Peaceful Life Doukhobor Village Settlement in Saskatchewan 1899 1918 Regina Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina 1996 ISBN 0 88977 100 6 Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ Hospitality Vegetarian Cooking the Doukhobor Way Grand Forks B C USCC Centennial Cookbook Committee 2003 ISBN 0 9732514 0 9 Woodsworth John Russian Roots and Canadian Wings Russian Archival Documents on the Doukhobor Emigration to Canada Canada Russia series v 1 Manotick Ont Penumbra Press 1999 ISBN 0 921254 89 X Shulgan Christopher June 12 2008 How the Doukhobors brought democracy to the USSR The Walrus Archived from the original on September 19 2021 Retrieved September 19 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Doukhobors Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Doukhobors Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ USCC Doukhobors Doukhobor Heritage the oldest largest and most comprehensive website about Doukhobors Doukhobor Heritage website Doukhobor genealogy and history Canada Explosion on the Kettle Valley Line The Death of Peter Verigin Great Unsolved Mysteries in Canadian History Doukhobor Discovery Centre Castlegar British Columbia Ivan Sysoev archived from the original on April 3 2005 prolific and well known Doukhobor poet and hymnist The Doukhobors Arrive in Canada The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Doukhobors amp oldid 1132548620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.