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Nenets people

The Nenets (Nenets: ненэй ненэче, nenəj nenəče, Russian: ненцы, nentsy), also known as Samoyed, are a Samoyedic ethnic group native to northern Arctic Russia, Russian Far North. According to the latest census in 2021, there were 49,646 Nenets in the Russian Federation, most of them living in the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Nenets Autonomous Okrug and Taymyrsky Dolgano-Nenetsky District stretching along the coastline of the Arctic Ocean near the Arctic Circle between Kola and Taymyr peninsulas. The Nenets people speak either the Tundra or Forest Nenets languages, which are mutually unintelligible. In the Russian Federation they have a status of indigenous small-numbered peoples.[3] Today, the Nenets people face numerous challenges from the state and oil and gas companies that threaten the environment and their way of life. As a result, many cite a rise in locally based activism.

Nenets
Ненэй ненэче
A Nenets family in the Brekhovskie Islands, photographed by Louie Atkinson in 1913
Total population
50,000
Regions with significant populations
 Russia49,646[1]
     Yamalo-Nenets AO35,917
     Nenets AO6,713
 Ukraine217[2]
Languages
Nenets, Russian
Religion
Shamanism, Animism, Russian Orthodoxy
Related ethnic groups
Enets, Nganasans, Selkups

Name

The literal morphs samo and yed in Russian convey the meaning "self-eater", which is considered derogatory. Therefore, the name Samoyed quickly went out of usage in the 20th century. The people are known as the nenety/nenaj/nenaye, which means "human".[4]

In old Russian, the term Samoyed was often applied indiscriminately to different peoples of Northern Russia who speak related Uralic languages: Nenets, Nganasans, Enets, Selkups (speakers of Samoyedic languages). Currently, the term "Samoyedic peoples" applies to the whole group of these different peoples. It is the general term that includes the Nenets, Enets, Selkup, and Nganasan people.

Number and settlement

 
Municipalities in which the proportion of Nenets exceeds 1%, in % according to the 2010 census

The names of two autonomous regions of Russia (Nenets, Yamal-Nenets) mention the Nenets as the titular nationality of the region; another such district (Taimyrsky (Dolgano-Nenetsky) Autonomous Okrug) was abolished in 2007 and transformed into the Taimyrsky Dolgano-Nenetsky District of the Krasnoyarsk Krai.

The Nenets are divided into two groups: tundra and forest; the two groups have different languages. Tundra Nenets are the majority. They live in two autonomous regions. Forest Nenets - about 1500 people. They live in the basin of the Pur and Taz rivers in the southeast of the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug and the east of the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug - Yugra.

Nenets population according to 2021 census[1]
Total Men Women
Total 49,787 23,521 26,266
Arkhangelsk Oblast 7,045 3,261 3,784
*Nenets Autonomous Okrug 6,712 3,102 3,620
Tyumen Oblast 37,753 17,915 19,838
*Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug 35,979 17,089 18,890
*Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug 1,383 656 727
Krasnoyarsk krai 3,853 1,853 1,988
Komi Republic 222 82 140
Murmansk Oblast 112 49 63

According to the 2021 census, there were 49,787 Nenets in Russia.

Language

The Nenets language is on the Samoyedic branch of the Uralic language family, with two major dialects, Forest Nenets and Tundra Nenets.[5] Ethnologue says that in Siberia, most young people are still fluent in Nenets, whereas in European Russia, they tend to speak Russian. Overall, the majority of native speakers are from older generations. UNESCO classifies Nenets as an endangered language.[6] Some believe that the use of Russian and Komi is due to inter-ethnic marriages.[7]

History and way of life

 
Nenets man, c. 1862
 
A group of Nenets in Dudinka (2000)
 
Russian–Nenets family in 2006.

There are two distinct groups of Nenets sensu stricto, based on their economy: the Tundra Nenets (living far to the north) and the Khandeyar, or Forest Nenets. A distinct third group of Nenets, (Yaran people), has emerged as a result of intermarriages between Nenets and Izhma Komi people.

The Samoyedic languages form a branch of the Uralic language family. According to one theory, they moved from farther south in Siberia to the northernmost part of what later became Russia sometime before the 12th century.

They ended up between the Kanin and Taymyr peninsulas, around the Ob and Yenisey rivers, with only a few of them settling into small communities like Kolva. Their main subsistence comes from hunting and reindeer herding. Using reindeer as a draft animal throughout the year enables them to cover great distances. Large-scale reindeer herding emerged in the 18th century. They bred the Samoyed dog to help herd their reindeer and pull their sleds, and European explorers later used these dogs for polar expeditions, because they were well adapted to the arctic conditions. Tundra wolves can cause considerable economic loss, as they prey on the reindeer herds which are the livelihood of some Nenets families.[8] However, the introduction of snowmobiles in the 1990s allowed the Nenets of the Yamal Peninsula to decimate the local wolf population, as the wolves have nowhere to hide on the open tundra.[9] Along with reindeer meat, fish is a major component in the Nenets' diet. Nenets housing is conical yurt (mya).

They have a shamanistic and animistic belief system which stresses respect for the land and its resources.[4] During migrations, the Nenets placed sacred items like bear skins, religious figures, coins and more on a holy sleigh. The contents of this sacred sleigh are only unpacked during special occasions or for religious rituals (like sacrifices). However, only esteemed elders are allowed to unpack the sacred sleigh.[10] They had a clan-based social structure. The Nenets shaman is called a Tadibya.

After the Russian Revolution, the Nenets culture suffered due to the Soviet collectivization policy. The government of the Soviet Union tried to force the nomadic Samoyeds to settle down permanently. They were forced to settle in villages and their children were educated in state boarding schools, which resulted in erosion of their cultural identity.[4] One significant way in which the Nenets culture was affected was in the change of the male's societal role. Previously, in the tundra, the male had the very important task of herding the reindeer. However, once the Nenets had to transition to a life away from the tundra, men found that they had lost their role. Much of the responsibility that awaited them in the village was considered, from the traditional point of view, to be women's work.[4] This erasure in the male identity was further enhanced by the Soviet government. In taiga villages occupations such as market gardening, fur farming, cattle breeding, trade, medicine, etc. were emphasized and these happened to be the ones that were marketed towards women.[4] Lastly, the jobs offered by the Soviet government were often occupied by women and not men as many of the men had taken up the habit of hard drinking.[4] Consequently, the once traditional culture of the Nenets people was swiftly upended. Many, especially in the Nenets Autonomous Okrug, lost their mother tongue and became assimilated.

One repercussion from the collectivization policy was reindeer ownership. Due to the collectivization policy, many herders moved north while many of those that remained were "deprived of their reindeer".[4] Nenets people once owned many reindeer but after the war, many Nenets had to transition to small-scale herding.[4] Although the Nenets herders were greatly affected, their lifestyle was not at threat for too long. While in the rest of Russia, the collectivization policy lasted for a very long time, it was only invoked onto the Yamal area for a decade.[4] This was because after Stalin's death in 1953, traditional economies were saved. 1950 to 1960 saw a 50% increase of reindeer and this number had almost doubled by 1980.[4] The next few decades saw the slow progress of the Nenets people regaining and preserving their traditional nomadic lifestyle. The accomplishment of appeasing officials while maintaining their culture was achieved through a series of stratagems. For example, herders would often mix up the herds so that inspectors would find it impossible to see the true ratio of private to collective deer.[4] Another method was for young herders to get a job as official workers of the state and pasture their own collective reindeer herd along with the private herd of one of their relatives. Once these herds were together and migration commenced, officials would not be able to know which of the reindeer were privately owned.[4]

 
A walrus ivory model of the Nenets encampment (18th century)

Since the 1930s, a few Nenets have expressed themselves professionally through cultural media. For instance, Tyko Vylka and Konstantin Pankov became well-known painters. Anna Nerkagi is one of the most celebrated Nenets writers. Yuri Vella, though living as a reindeer herder, has become the first writer in the Forest Nenets language.

Environment

Although the Nenets people were able to remain resilient in the face of continuous change and maltreatment, a new challenge now awaits them. Environmental damage to the Nenets' is significant due to industrialisation of their land, colonization and climate change. The Nenet people depend heavily on fishing and reindeer herding to support their lifestyle. However, these practices are highly reliant on the environment which is under threat from the oil industry. Specifically, the nomadic lifestyle the Nenet people have been accustomed to for generations is in danger as the oil industries encroach on reindeer pasture and territory.[11] Approximately half of the 10,000 Nenets people in the Yamal Peninsula are nomadic and herd reindeer.[11] With oil industries continuing to expand, the impact on the Nenets people is expected to increase.

Oil drilling in the peninsula

Since the 1980s, the Arctic Circle has gained the interest of those in the energy and mining industry.[12] Although expansion halted briefly in the 1990s post-USSR disintegration, development picked up in 2004.[12] As oil and gas companies continue to expand, along with it has come an expansion of infrastructure coming in the form of roads, power lines as well as human and vehicle traffic.[12] A big milestone was in 2008, when Gazprom, the largest natural gas company in the world, entered the Yamal peninsula in their efforts to launch the Yamal Megaproject.[13] Gazprom's arrival to the Yamal peninsula has brought about significant change to the area. According to the company's website, they operate a total of 32 fields.[14] These fields bring in up to 360 billion cubic meters of gas per year and in 2019, Gazprom alone produced 96.3 billion cubic meters of gas.[14] Another milestone was when Yamal LNG Project: Novatek, another Russian owned company, partnered with two other international corporations to build a plant on the Yamal peninsula in July 2013.[13]

The impact on the Nenets people

 
Herders with their reindeer

The impact of large energy corporations in the Yamal peninsula can be felt in numerous ways. The largest of these can be seen in the effects on migration routes. With the Nenets people being nomadic and reliant on reindeer husbandry, the migratory routes for the reindeer are very important to them. These migratory routes are very specific and a lot of consideration goes into planning them. Additionally, the herders believe that it is necessary for the reindeer to migrate in order for them to maintain their good health.[12] The herders claim that this is because the vegetation found on the coast are good for reindeer as they are richer in salt and minerals.[12] Also, by reaching the coast with the migrations, the reindeer are able to find relief from insects such as mosquito and botfly by avoiding infestation periods.[12] These migratory routes that the herders and reindeer use are made of rugged terrain as they provide a good space to herd the reindeer. However, the companies that enter the Yamal peninsula also prefer this rugged terrain to build their infrastructure upon, causing a direct overlap in land of interest.[12] For example, in the Bovanenko core area, a research study was conducted that found that industrial development targeted "rugged, elevated drier land" which is the type of land used by the reindeer herders.[12] Thus, as the Nenets people rely on reindeer that, in turn, rely on the migratory routes, the expansion of industrial development has had a large impact on the Nenets people.

Although not directly related to migration routes, another impact is the effect on Nenets peoples' sacred spots. The Nenets people have a tradition of designating a sacred spot where they make a request of the spirits for a successful migration. Nenets sacred spots are made into a major sand/quarry pit and marked by wooden pegs.[12] In one case, a sacred spot of the Nenets people was fenced in during the industrial development, dissolving it of its traditional significance.[11] Many of the workers believed that their construction did not actually intrude on the sacred spot, however many of the herders believed that the spot had been "desecrated".[12] This difference in perceptions highlights how many non-indigenous people are only able to view land as something to be owned. Meanwhile, for indigenous people, such a viewpoint is non-existent. Herders have a spiritual relationship with the land and do not view it as simply owned vs not-owned.[12]

Another smaller effect of the industrial development has been its impact on fish. Due to the industrial development, there has been a degradation of freshwater sources which has led to a decrease in the population.[11] Additionally, the industrial development has spilled over to occupy much of the fishing grounds necessary for the Nenets people. As the Nenets people depend on the fish as their source of food in the summer, the depletion of fish has directly impacted the Nenets people.

Lastly, an impact that is loosely related with the migration routes is accessibility to health care clinics by the Nenets people. Since the arrival of large oil and gas companies in the 1990s, climate in the region has been impacted. In fact, since 1991 temperature anomalies in the Kanin have increased an estimated 1.4 degrees Celsius per decade.[15] Within this same period, researchers found a trend of delayed herder arrivals to their local health clinic.[15] Researchers cite the lengthening of the migrations as the reason for the delay. As the herders need open water to freeze to make crossings of reindeer and herders possible, there is a specific window in which herders can visit their local health clinics. Since 1991, the arrival of herders at one health clinic can be observed shifting from October to December, marking an evident postponement in arrival.[15]

Nenets activism

 
Nenets child

There are some Nenets people, activists, and researchers who are nervous about the current situation in the Yamal peninsula. This is because there is concern that authorities of the Nenets people will make a deal to merge with another region.[16] Nenets people worry that the deal will lead to a passing in their autonomy as well as their language and traditions.[16] As of November 2020, the Nenets people have not merged with other regions.

In a similar vein, Nenets people also face danger from industrial companies. Although the industrial companies have paid compensations and made efforts to assist the Nenets people, some experts say that the current process does not allow for participation from the Nenets people.[17] This sort of relationship is described by some as "paternalistic" as it does not aid in allowing the Nenets people to make their own decisions.[17]

The Nenets people have previously attempted to organize and protest against these oil and gas companies.[18] However, it is difficult for the nomadic people to gather as a collective unit as they live so far apart from each other. An individual effort that was notable was Yuri Vella's protests. Vella was a Nenets writer and having lived near a lake that was licensed over to an oil company, protested often.[19] Most notably, he is remembered for having stood up against a bulldozer alone with an axe.[20]

Vella, however, is not alone in his activism. There exists a rural protest community called Voice of the Tundra that currently speaks on topics such as the rights of the Nenets people.[19] As aforementioned, it is difficult to gather collectively and so this community relies on VKontakte, a Russian online service, to mobilize and communicate.[19] Additionally, rather than being led by lawyers or journalists or scholars, the community has a young reindeer herder from the tundra as their leaders.[19] The Voice of the Tundra focuses its attention on three main issues: a shortage of land for the reindeer due to oil and gas companies expanding use of the territories, the uncertainty surrounding the future of nomadic reindeer herding, and the lack of Indigenous leadership and organization.[21]

The Voice of the Tundra project is being celebrated as it symbolizes a return of politics to Russia's Indigenous peoples.[21] Specifically, a reindeer herder by the name of Eiko Serotetto is being heralded as the main activist generating the change. Serotetto is not someone who has had a traditional background or education. However, in 2016, he demonstrated that this would not weigh him down when he began to take action in the aftermath of the anthrax epidemic.[21] Serotetto posted a petition on social media that asked for attention to be brought to the Indigenous peoples and their reindeers. Serotetto requested protection of Indigenous habitats, reindeer, and rights. This petition brought attention to the Russian officials who were not addressing the "real life of the tundra and Indigenous people".[21] Later, Serotetto's most impactful petition was made when he advocated for the boycott of Russian oil and gas.[21]

Although there are many Nenets people who are against the industrial development going on in the Yamal peninsula such as the activists aforementioned, there are also many who are in support of the developments. Those who are in favour of the developments highlight the economic benefits that they are able to receive. In a research study conducted in the area, one villager reported that they were able to coexist with the industries through social agreements, voluntary giving, and compensation for damages.[17]

Some argue that this variance in support for the industrial companies from the Nenets people lies in factors such as active leadership from community leaders.[17] This reasoning can be seen as falling similarly in line with what the Voice of the Tundra was fighting for, as it can be seen that proper Indigenous leadership and involvement can lead to higher satisfaction among the Nenets people.

Notable Nenets

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Национальный состав населения". Federal State Statistics Service. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  2. ^ [1] (Ukrainian)
  3. ^ Small(-numbered) peoples of the North and the Far East (МАЛЫЕ НАРОДЫ СЕВЕРА И ДАЛЬНЕГО ВОСТОКА). Multinational Petersburg. 18 July 2015
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Anderson, David G. (December 2000). "Siberian Survival: The Nenets and Their Story.:Siberian Survival: The Nenets and Their Story". American Anthropologist. 102 (4): 942–943. doi:10.1525/aa.2000.102.4.942. ISSN 0002-7294.
  5. ^ "Nenets: A language of Russian Federation". Ethnologue: Languages of the World. Ethnologue. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  6. ^ Janhunen, Juha; Salminen, Tapani. "UNESCO Red Book on Endangered Languages: Northeast Asia". Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  7. ^ Games, Alex (2007), Balderdash & piffle : one sandwich short of a dog's dinner, London: BBC, ISBN 978-1-84607-235-2
  8. ^ Heptner, V. G. & Naumov, N., P. (editors) Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol.II Part 1a, SIRENIA AND CARNIVORA (Sea cows; Wolves and Bears), Science Publishers, Inc. USA. 1998. ISBN 1-886106-81-9
  9. ^ Terekhina, Alexandra (2021). "The context of an emerging predation problem: Nenets reindeer herders and Arctic foxes in Yamal". European Journal of Wildlife Research: 2–3.
  10. ^ Winston, Robert, ed. (2004). Human: The Definitive Guide. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 428. ISBN 0-7566-0520-2.
  11. ^ a b c d Forbes, Bruce (2009). ""High resilience in the Yamal-Nenets social–ecological system, West Siberian Arctic, Russia"". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 106 (52): 22041–22048. doi:10.1073/pnas.0908286106. PMC 2791666. PMID 20007776.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Degteva, Anna; Nellemann, Christian (2013). "Nenets migration in the landscape: impacts of industrial development in Yamal peninsula, Russia". Pastoralism: Research, Policy and Practice. 3 (1): 15. doi:10.1186/2041-7136-3-15. ISSN 2041-7136.
  13. ^ a b "Evolution of Arctic Energy Development: A Timeline (1962-Present)". Stimson. 15 September 2013.
  14. ^ a b "Yamal". www.gazprom.com. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  15. ^ a b c Amstislavski, Philippe; Zubov, Leonid; Chen, Herman; Ceccato, Pietro; Pekel, Jean-Francois; Weedon, Jeremy (2013-01-31). "Effects of increase in temperature and open water on transmigration and access to health care by the Nenets reindeer herders in northern Russia". International Journal of Circumpolar Health. 72 (1): 21183. doi:10.3402/ijch.v72i0.21183. ISSN 2242-3982. PMC 3749856. PMID 23971018.
  16. ^ a b "Secluded Arctic region rejects Putin in rare protest". CNA. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  17. ^ a b c d Henry, Laura A.; Nysten-Haarala, Soili; Tulaeva, Svetlana; Tysiachniouk, Maria (2016-09-13). "Corporate Social Responsibility and the Oil Industry in the Russian Arctic: Global Norms and Neo-Paternalism". Europe-Asia Studies. 68 (8): 1340–1368. doi:10.1080/09668136.2016.1233523. ISSN 0966-8136. S2CID 157741433.
  18. ^ Edwards, Maxim (20 February 2020). "Pipeline problems for indigenous peoples on Russia's Yamal Peninsula". GlobalVoices.
  19. ^ a b c d Magomedov, Arbakhan (2019). "Challenges for Indigenous Peoples in the Russian North". Riddle.
  20. ^ Klyashev, Alexander (2017-11-20). "Reindeer Herders and White-Collar Workers: A Descriptive Study of Protestant Ethnic Groups in Urals and Western Siberia". doi:10.20944/preprints201711.0123.v1. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  21. ^ a b c d e Magomedov, Arbakhan (2020). "The Russian State and the Arctic Indigenous Peoples: Is Politics Coming Back?". The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization.

External links

  • Aging in the Nenets community
  • UNESCO Red Book on endangered languages
  • Jarkko Niemi: The types of the Nenets songs. 1997
  • Minority languages of Russia on the Net
  • The Red Book of the peoples of the Russian Empire
  • Article on Nenets religion, culture and history
  • Historic-demographic note on the Nenets of the Komi Republic
  • BBC: Nenets Tribe
  • Photos of Nenets reindeer herders
  • BBC Living with Nomads 2/3 Siberia

nenets, people, confused, with, enets, people, nenets, nenets, ненэй, ненэче, nenəj, nenəče, russian, ненцы, nentsy, also, known, samoyed, samoyedic, ethnic, group, native, northern, arctic, russia, russian, north, according, latest, census, 2021, there, were,. Not to be confused with Enets people The Nenets Nenets nenej neneche nenej nenece Russian nency nentsy also known as Samoyed are a Samoyedic ethnic group native to northern Arctic Russia Russian Far North According to the latest census in 2021 there were 49 646 Nenets in the Russian Federation most of them living in the Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug Nenets Autonomous Okrug and Taymyrsky Dolgano Nenetsky District stretching along the coastline of the Arctic Ocean near the Arctic Circle between Kola and Taymyr peninsulas The Nenets people speak either the Tundra or Forest Nenets languages which are mutually unintelligible In the Russian Federation they have a status of indigenous small numbered peoples 3 Today the Nenets people face numerous challenges from the state and oil and gas companies that threaten the environment and their way of life As a result many cite a rise in locally based activism NenetsNenej nenecheA Nenets family in the Brekhovskie Islands photographed by Louie Atkinson in 1913Total population50 000Regions with significant populations Russia49 646 1 Yamalo Nenets AO35 917 Nenets AO6 713 Ukraine217 2 LanguagesNenets RussianReligionShamanism Animism Russian OrthodoxyRelated ethnic groupsEnets Nganasans Selkups Contents 1 Name 2 Number and settlement 3 Language 4 History and way of life 5 Environment 5 1 Oil drilling in the peninsula 5 2 The impact on the Nenets people 5 3 Nenets activism 6 Notable Nenets 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksName EditThe literal morphs samo and yed in Russian convey the meaning self eater which is considered derogatory Therefore the name Samoyed quickly went out of usage in the 20th century The people are known as the nenety nenaj nenaye which means human 4 In old Russian the term Samoyed was often applied indiscriminately to different peoples of Northern Russia who speak related Uralic languages Nenets Nganasans Enets Selkups speakers of Samoyedic languages Currently the term Samoyedic peoples applies to the whole group of these different peoples It is the general term that includes the Nenets Enets Selkup and Nganasan people Number and settlement Edit Municipalities in which the proportion of Nenets exceeds 1 in according to the 2010 census The names of two autonomous regions of Russia Nenets Yamal Nenets mention the Nenets as the titular nationality of the region another such district Taimyrsky Dolgano Nenetsky Autonomous Okrug was abolished in 2007 and transformed into the Taimyrsky Dolgano Nenetsky District of the Krasnoyarsk Krai The Nenets are divided into two groups tundra and forest the two groups have different languages Tundra Nenets are the majority They live in two autonomous regions Forest Nenets about 1500 people They live in the basin of the Pur and Taz rivers in the southeast of the Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug and the east of the Khanty Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug Yugra Nenets population according to 2021 census 1 Total Men WomenTotal 49 787 23 521 26 266Arkhangelsk Oblast 7 045 3 261 3 784 Nenets Autonomous Okrug 6 712 3 102 3 620Tyumen Oblast 37 753 17 915 19 838 Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug 35 979 17 089 18 890 Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug 1 383 656 727Krasnoyarsk krai 3 853 1 853 1 988Komi Republic 222 82 140Murmansk Oblast 112 49 63According to the 2021 census there were 49 787 Nenets in Russia Language EditMain articles Nenets languages Tundra Nenets language and Forest Nenets language The Nenets language is on the Samoyedic branch of the Uralic language family with two major dialects Forest Nenets and Tundra Nenets 5 Ethnologue says that in Siberia most young people are still fluent in Nenets whereas in European Russia they tend to speak Russian Overall the majority of native speakers are from older generations UNESCO classifies Nenets as an endangered language 6 Some believe that the use of Russian and Komi is due to inter ethnic marriages 7 History and way of life EditSee also Great Perm Nenets man c 1862 A group of Nenets in Dudinka 2000 Russian Nenets family in 2006 There are two distinct groups of Nenets sensu stricto based on their economy the Tundra Nenets living far to the north and the Khandeyar or Forest Nenets A distinct third group of Nenets Yaran people has emerged as a result of intermarriages between Nenets and Izhma Komi people The Samoyedic languages form a branch of the Uralic language family According to one theory they moved from farther south in Siberia to the northernmost part of what later became Russia sometime before the 12th century They ended up between the Kanin and Taymyr peninsulas around the Ob and Yenisey rivers with only a few of them settling into small communities like Kolva Their main subsistence comes from hunting and reindeer herding Using reindeer as a draft animal throughout the year enables them to cover great distances Large scale reindeer herding emerged in the 18th century They bred the Samoyed dog to help herd their reindeer and pull their sleds and European explorers later used these dogs for polar expeditions because they were well adapted to the arctic conditions Tundra wolves can cause considerable economic loss as they prey on the reindeer herds which are the livelihood of some Nenets families 8 However the introduction of snowmobiles in the 1990s allowed the Nenets of the Yamal Peninsula to decimate the local wolf population as the wolves have nowhere to hide on the open tundra 9 Along with reindeer meat fish is a major component in the Nenets diet Nenets housing is conical yurt mya They have a shamanistic and animistic belief system which stresses respect for the land and its resources 4 During migrations the Nenets placed sacred items like bear skins religious figures coins and more on a holy sleigh The contents of this sacred sleigh are only unpacked during special occasions or for religious rituals like sacrifices However only esteemed elders are allowed to unpack the sacred sleigh 10 They had a clan based social structure The Nenets shaman is called a Tadibya After the Russian Revolution the Nenets culture suffered due to the Soviet collectivization policy The government of the Soviet Union tried to force the nomadic Samoyeds to settle down permanently They were forced to settle in villages and their children were educated in state boarding schools which resulted in erosion of their cultural identity 4 One significant way in which the Nenets culture was affected was in the change of the male s societal role Previously in the tundra the male had the very important task of herding the reindeer However once the Nenets had to transition to a life away from the tundra men found that they had lost their role Much of the responsibility that awaited them in the village was considered from the traditional point of view to be women s work 4 This erasure in the male identity was further enhanced by the Soviet government In taiga villages occupations such as market gardening fur farming cattle breeding trade medicine etc were emphasized and these happened to be the ones that were marketed towards women 4 Lastly the jobs offered by the Soviet government were often occupied by women and not men as many of the men had taken up the habit of hard drinking 4 Consequently the once traditional culture of the Nenets people was swiftly upended Many especially in the Nenets Autonomous Okrug lost their mother tongue and became assimilated One repercussion from the collectivization policy was reindeer ownership Due to the collectivization policy many herders moved north while many of those that remained were deprived of their reindeer 4 Nenets people once owned many reindeer but after the war many Nenets had to transition to small scale herding 4 Although the Nenets herders were greatly affected their lifestyle was not at threat for too long While in the rest of Russia the collectivization policy lasted for a very long time it was only invoked onto the Yamal area for a decade 4 This was because after Stalin s death in 1953 traditional economies were saved 1950 to 1960 saw a 50 increase of reindeer and this number had almost doubled by 1980 4 The next few decades saw the slow progress of the Nenets people regaining and preserving their traditional nomadic lifestyle The accomplishment of appeasing officials while maintaining their culture was achieved through a series of stratagems For example herders would often mix up the herds so that inspectors would find it impossible to see the true ratio of private to collective deer 4 Another method was for young herders to get a job as official workers of the state and pasture their own collective reindeer herd along with the private herd of one of their relatives Once these herds were together and migration commenced officials would not be able to know which of the reindeer were privately owned 4 A walrus ivory model of the Nenets encampment 18th century Since the 1930s a few Nenets have expressed themselves professionally through cultural media For instance Tyko Vylka and Konstantin Pankov became well known painters Anna Nerkagi is one of the most celebrated Nenets writers Yuri Vella though living as a reindeer herder has become the first writer in the Forest Nenets language Environment EditAlthough the Nenets people were able to remain resilient in the face of continuous change and maltreatment a new challenge now awaits them Environmental damage to the Nenets is significant due to industrialisation of their land colonization and climate change The Nenet people depend heavily on fishing and reindeer herding to support their lifestyle However these practices are highly reliant on the environment which is under threat from the oil industry Specifically the nomadic lifestyle the Nenet people have been accustomed to for generations is in danger as the oil industries encroach on reindeer pasture and territory 11 Approximately half of the 10 000 Nenets people in the Yamal Peninsula are nomadic and herd reindeer 11 With oil industries continuing to expand the impact on the Nenets people is expected to increase Oil drilling in the peninsula Edit Since the 1980s the Arctic Circle has gained the interest of those in the energy and mining industry 12 Although expansion halted briefly in the 1990s post USSR disintegration development picked up in 2004 12 As oil and gas companies continue to expand along with it has come an expansion of infrastructure coming in the form of roads power lines as well as human and vehicle traffic 12 A big milestone was in 2008 when Gazprom the largest natural gas company in the world entered the Yamal peninsula in their efforts to launch the Yamal Megaproject 13 Gazprom s arrival to the Yamal peninsula has brought about significant change to the area According to the company s website they operate a total of 32 fields 14 These fields bring in up to 360 billion cubic meters of gas per year and in 2019 Gazprom alone produced 96 3 billion cubic meters of gas 14 Another milestone was when Yamal LNG Project Novatek another Russian owned company partnered with two other international corporations to build a plant on the Yamal peninsula in July 2013 13 The impact on the Nenets people Edit Herders with their reindeer The impact of large energy corporations in the Yamal peninsula can be felt in numerous ways The largest of these can be seen in the effects on migration routes With the Nenets people being nomadic and reliant on reindeer husbandry the migratory routes for the reindeer are very important to them These migratory routes are very specific and a lot of consideration goes into planning them Additionally the herders believe that it is necessary for the reindeer to migrate in order for them to maintain their good health 12 The herders claim that this is because the vegetation found on the coast are good for reindeer as they are richer in salt and minerals 12 Also by reaching the coast with the migrations the reindeer are able to find relief from insects such as mosquito and botfly by avoiding infestation periods 12 These migratory routes that the herders and reindeer use are made of rugged terrain as they provide a good space to herd the reindeer However the companies that enter the Yamal peninsula also prefer this rugged terrain to build their infrastructure upon causing a direct overlap in land of interest 12 For example in the Bovanenko core area a research study was conducted that found that industrial development targeted rugged elevated drier land which is the type of land used by the reindeer herders 12 Thus as the Nenets people rely on reindeer that in turn rely on the migratory routes the expansion of industrial development has had a large impact on the Nenets people Although not directly related to migration routes another impact is the effect on Nenets peoples sacred spots The Nenets people have a tradition of designating a sacred spot where they make a request of the spirits for a successful migration Nenets sacred spots are made into a major sand quarry pit and marked by wooden pegs 12 In one case a sacred spot of the Nenets people was fenced in during the industrial development dissolving it of its traditional significance 11 Many of the workers believed that their construction did not actually intrude on the sacred spot however many of the herders believed that the spot had been desecrated 12 This difference in perceptions highlights how many non indigenous people are only able to view land as something to be owned Meanwhile for indigenous people such a viewpoint is non existent Herders have a spiritual relationship with the land and do not view it as simply owned vs not owned 12 Another smaller effect of the industrial development has been its impact on fish Due to the industrial development there has been a degradation of freshwater sources which has led to a decrease in the population 11 Additionally the industrial development has spilled over to occupy much of the fishing grounds necessary for the Nenets people As the Nenets people depend on the fish as their source of food in the summer the depletion of fish has directly impacted the Nenets people Lastly an impact that is loosely related with the migration routes is accessibility to health care clinics by the Nenets people Since the arrival of large oil and gas companies in the 1990s climate in the region has been impacted In fact since 1991 temperature anomalies in the Kanin have increased an estimated 1 4 degrees Celsius per decade 15 Within this same period researchers found a trend of delayed herder arrivals to their local health clinic 15 Researchers cite the lengthening of the migrations as the reason for the delay As the herders need open water to freeze to make crossings of reindeer and herders possible there is a specific window in which herders can visit their local health clinics Since 1991 the arrival of herders at one health clinic can be observed shifting from October to December marking an evident postponement in arrival 15 Nenets activism Edit Nenets child There are some Nenets people activists and researchers who are nervous about the current situation in the Yamal peninsula This is because there is concern that authorities of the Nenets people will make a deal to merge with another region 16 Nenets people worry that the deal will lead to a passing in their autonomy as well as their language and traditions 16 As of November 2020 the Nenets people have not merged with other regions In a similar vein Nenets people also face danger from industrial companies Although the industrial companies have paid compensations and made efforts to assist the Nenets people some experts say that the current process does not allow for participation from the Nenets people 17 This sort of relationship is described by some as paternalistic as it does not aid in allowing the Nenets people to make their own decisions 17 The Nenets people have previously attempted to organize and protest against these oil and gas companies 18 However it is difficult for the nomadic people to gather as a collective unit as they live so far apart from each other An individual effort that was notable was Yuri Vella s protests Vella was a Nenets writer and having lived near a lake that was licensed over to an oil company protested often 19 Most notably he is remembered for having stood up against a bulldozer alone with an axe 20 Vella however is not alone in his activism There exists a rural protest community called Voice of the Tundra that currently speaks on topics such as the rights of the Nenets people 19 As aforementioned it is difficult to gather collectively and so this community relies on VKontakte a Russian online service to mobilize and communicate 19 Additionally rather than being led by lawyers or journalists or scholars the community has a young reindeer herder from the tundra as their leaders 19 The Voice of the Tundra focuses its attention on three main issues a shortage of land for the reindeer due to oil and gas companies expanding use of the territories the uncertainty surrounding the future of nomadic reindeer herding and the lack of Indigenous leadership and organization 21 The Voice of the Tundra project is being celebrated as it symbolizes a return of politics to Russia s Indigenous peoples 21 Specifically a reindeer herder by the name of Eiko Serotetto is being heralded as the main activist generating the change Serotetto is not someone who has had a traditional background or education However in 2016 he demonstrated that this would not weigh him down when he began to take action in the aftermath of the anthrax epidemic 21 Serotetto posted a petition on social media that asked for attention to be brought to the Indigenous peoples and their reindeers Serotetto requested protection of Indigenous habitats reindeer and rights This petition brought attention to the Russian officials who were not addressing the real life of the tundra and Indigenous people 21 Later Serotetto s most impactful petition was made when he advocated for the boycott of Russian oil and gas 21 Although there are many Nenets people who are against the industrial development going on in the Yamal peninsula such as the activists aforementioned there are also many who are in support of the developments Those who are in favour of the developments highlight the economic benefits that they are able to receive In a research study conducted in the area one villager reported that they were able to coexist with the industries through social agreements voluntary giving and compensation for damages 17 Some argue that this variance in support for the industrial companies from the Nenets people lies in factors such as active leadership from community leaders 17 This reasoning can be seen as falling similarly in line with what the Voice of the Tundra was fighting for as it can be seen that proper Indigenous leadership and involvement can lead to higher satisfaction among the Nenets people Notable Nenets EditTyko Vylka 1886 1960 painter Konstantin Pankov 1910 1942 painter Anastasia Lapsui b 1944 film director screenwriter Yuri Vella 1948 2013 writer poet environmentalist social activist Anna Nerkagi b 1952 writer novelist social activistSee also EditMusic of Nenetsia Nga god Samoyed dog Siberian minorities in the Soviet era Pole worshipReferences Edit a b Nacionalnyj sostav naseleniya Federal State Statistics Service Retrieved 30 December 2022 1 Ukrainian Small numbered peoples of the North and the Far East MALYE NARODY SEVERA I DALNEGO VOSTOKA Multinational Petersburg 18 July 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l Anderson David G December 2000 Siberian Survival The Nenets and Their Story Siberian Survival The Nenets and Their Story American Anthropologist 102 4 942 943 doi 10 1525 aa 2000 102 4 942 ISSN 0002 7294 Nenets A language of Russian Federation Ethnologue Languages of the World Ethnologue Retrieved 23 November 2015 Janhunen Juha Salminen Tapani UNESCO Red Book on Endangered Languages Northeast Asia Retrieved 23 November 2015 Games Alex 2007 Balderdash amp piffle one sandwich short of a dog s dinner London BBC ISBN 978 1 84607 235 2 Heptner V G amp Naumov N P editors Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol II Part 1a SIRENIA AND CARNIVORA Sea cows Wolves and Bears Science Publishers Inc USA 1998 ISBN 1 886106 81 9 Terekhina Alexandra 2021 The context of an emerging predation problem Nenets reindeer herders and Arctic foxes in Yamal European Journal of Wildlife Research 2 3 Winston Robert ed 2004 Human The Definitive Guide New York Dorling Kindersley p 428 ISBN 0 7566 0520 2 a b c d Forbes Bruce 2009 High resilience in the Yamal Nenets social ecological system West Siberian Arctic Russia Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106 52 22041 22048 doi 10 1073 pnas 0908286106 PMC 2791666 PMID 20007776 a b c d e f g h i j k Degteva Anna Nellemann Christian 2013 Nenets migration in the landscape impacts of industrial development in Yamal peninsula Russia Pastoralism Research Policy and Practice 3 1 15 doi 10 1186 2041 7136 3 15 ISSN 2041 7136 a b Evolution of Arctic Energy Development A Timeline 1962 Present Stimson 15 September 2013 a b Yamal www gazprom com Retrieved 2020 11 23 a b c Amstislavski Philippe Zubov Leonid Chen Herman Ceccato Pietro Pekel Jean Francois Weedon Jeremy 2013 01 31 Effects of increase in temperature and open water on transmigration and access to health care by the Nenets reindeer herders in northern Russia International Journal of Circumpolar Health 72 1 21183 doi 10 3402 ijch v72i0 21183 ISSN 2242 3982 PMC 3749856 PMID 23971018 a b Secluded Arctic region rejects Putin in rare protest CNA Retrieved 2020 11 23 a b c d Henry Laura A Nysten Haarala Soili Tulaeva Svetlana Tysiachniouk Maria 2016 09 13 Corporate Social Responsibility and the Oil Industry in the Russian Arctic Global Norms and Neo Paternalism Europe Asia Studies 68 8 1340 1368 doi 10 1080 09668136 2016 1233523 ISSN 0966 8136 S2CID 157741433 Edwards Maxim 20 February 2020 Pipeline problems for indigenous peoples on Russia s Yamal Peninsula GlobalVoices a b c d Magomedov Arbakhan 2019 Challenges for Indigenous Peoples in the Russian North Riddle Klyashev Alexander 2017 11 20 Reindeer Herders and White Collar Workers A Descriptive Study of Protestant Ethnic Groups in Urals and Western Siberia doi 10 20944 preprints201711 0123 v1 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e Magomedov Arbakhan 2020 The Russian State and the Arctic Indigenous Peoples Is Politics Coming Back The Journal of Post Soviet Democratization Samoyedes Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed 1911 p 118 External links EditAging in the Nenets community UNESCO Red Book on endangered languages Jarkko Niemi The types of the Nenets songs 1997 Minority languages of Russia on the Net The Red Book of the peoples of the Russian Empire Article on Nenets religion culture and history Historic demographic note on the Nenets of the Komi Republic BBC Nenets Tribe Photos of Nenets reindeer herders BBC Living with Nomads 2 3 Siberia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nenets people amp oldid 1152820580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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