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Poles in Kazakhstan

Poles in Kazakhstan form one portion of the Polish diaspora in the former Soviet Union. Slightly less than half of Kazakhstan's Poles live in the Karaganda region, with another 2,500 in Astana, 1,200 in Almaty, and the rest scattered throughout rural regions.[3]

Poles in Kazakhstan
Polish women in Kazakhstan
Total population
29,728 (2019, census)
Regions with significant populations
Northern Kazakhstan[1]
Languages
Primarily Russian; only 12% claim knowledge of Polish[2]
Religion
Christian
Related ethnic groups
Polish diaspora

Migration history edit

Arrival edit

The first Pole to travel to the territory which today makes up Kazakhstan was probably Benedict of Poland, sent as part of the delegation of Pope Innocent IV to the Khagan Güyük of the Mongol Empire.[4]

Migration of Poles to Kazakhstan, largely of an involuntary character, began soon after the Kazakh Khanate came under the control of the Russians. Captured participants of the 1830-1831 November Uprising and the 1863-1865 January Uprising, as well as members of clandestine organisations, were sent into exile throughout the Russian Empire. By the time of the Russian Empire Census of 1897, there were already 11,579 Poles in Central Asia, 90 per cent male.[5] Poles both inside and outside of the Soviet Union would later get caught up in Stalinist population transfers in the late 1930s. At least 250,000 Poles from the Polish National Districts of the Soviet Union were deported to the Kazakh SSR in 1930s; among those, as many as 100,000 did not survive the first winter in the country.[6]

 
Kazakh postal stamp from 2017 commemorating the Polish Anders' Army

After the Soviet invasion of Poland at the start of World War II, another 150,000 Poles were deported from eastern Polish territories to Kazakhstan; 80% of these were women and children, as the adult men of their community were typically absent due to army service. In early 1942, a portion of the Polish Anders' Army along with civilians was relocated to southern Kazakhstan, whereas the remainder was moved to the Uzbek and Kyrgyz SSRs.[7] The 1st Uhlan Regiment, the 8th Infantry Division and 10th Infantry Division were stationed in Otar, Shokpak and Lugovoy, respectively.[8] The Poles suffered from epidemics and famine and many died.[9] In 1942, the army with many civilians was evacuated to Iran. As of 1943, there were still nearly 77,000 Polish citizens in Kazakhstan, according to Soviet data.[10]

After the end of the war, people who had been Polish citizens before September 1, 1939 were allowed to repatriate to Poland; however, no provision was made for earlier deportees to leave Kazakhstan.[11] After the war, over 62,000 Poles were repatriated from Kazakhstan to Poland in 1946–1948.[12]

The 1970 Soviet census found 61,400 Poles (0.5% of the population) in the Kazakh SSR, while the 1979 census found 61,100 (0.4%) and the 1989 census 59,400 (0.4%).[13] However, Polish scholars believe these numbers to be underestimates, due to the reluctance of Poles to register their true ethnicity in their official documentation and the relative ease of changing one's declared nationality to another, such as Ukrainian or Russian; they have given numbers ranging from 100,000 to 400,000.[14]

Post-Soviet emigration edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
18971,254—    
19263,762+200.0%
193954,809+1356.9%
195953,102−3.1%
197061,335+15.5%
197961,136−0.3%
198959,956−1.9%
199947,297−21.1%
200934,057−28.0%
According to official census data:[15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22]

When communist rule in Poland ended, there was great political enthusiasm on the part of the new Polish government for facilitating the repatriation of members of the Polish diaspora. However, up until 1996, there was no formal system for controlling the migration of ethnic Poles from the Soviet Union to Poland. Roughly 1,500 Poles from Kazakhstan came to Poland during this period, often on tourist visas. They were typically granted residency permits, but only a few managed to obtain Polish citizenship. However, legal reforms in 1996 and again in 1998 regularised the immigration procedures, allowing any ethnic Pole from abroad to settle in the country upon receiving an invitation from a company or association.[23] Prospective emigrants were required to apply at the Polish consulate in Kazakhstan with documentary proof of their Polish ancestry.[24]

In a 1996-1998 academic survey, Poles who had emigrated from Kazakhstan cited a number of reasons for their departure, including the decreased social status of non-Kazakh-speakers in the newly independent country, the local economic crisis which saw many salaries go unpaid, and the desire to avoid service in the Kazakhstani army. Some also claimed to survey takers that their female relatives were in danger of bride kidnapping.[25]

Due to their experience with agriculture on kolkhoz during communism, many of the Poles in Kazakhstan were able to obtain invitations from rural communes in Poland, which hoped to revive farms that would otherwise be sold to German expatriates. However, in practise many were specialised with only one type of skill, and lacked familiarity with other aspects of farm operation that they would need in their new lives in Poland.[26] In other cases, Polish students came to Kazakhstan with grants from the Polish Ministry of Education (100 each year), and later invited their family members to join them.[27] There were also reports of people from Poland travelling to Kazakhstan and selling invitations at a high price.[28] The number of repatriates might be as large as 20,000, and is partially reflected by a decrease in the Kazakhstan census' recorded number of Poles in the country.[29]

Religion edit

The first Polish Catholic church for exiles on the steppe was opened at Orenburg in 1844; another was opened in Omsk in 1862. (Both cities are today part of Russia). By 1917, the church at Petropavlovsk had grown to 3,000 members.[30] During the years of exile and assimilation to Soviet-Russian society, for many Poles the Catholic religion was the only link to their ancestral culture.[31]

Inter-ethnic relations edit

Poles tend to be settled in multi-ethnic regions of Kazakhstan, where settlers and exiles of many other nationalities predominated and members of the titular Kazakh nationality were few. Interethnic marriages between Poles and members of other European ethnic groups were quite common; however, those with members of traditionally Muslim ethnic groups were much rarer. An anthropological study conducted in 1993 found that Poles generally viewed the Kazakhs as lazy but friendly, and generally stated that inter-ethnic relations were good.[32]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Poujol 2007, p. 92
  2. ^ Iglicka 1998, p. 1001
  3. ^ Poujol 2007, p. 92
  4. ^ Poujol 2007, p. 93
  5. ^ Iglicka 1998, pp. 997–998
  6. ^ Iglicka 1998, pp. 998–999
  7. ^ Ocaleni z "nieludzkiej ziemi" (in Polish). Łódź: Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. 2012. p. 46. ISBN 978-83-63695-00-2.
  8. ^ "Tworzenie Armii Polskiej w ZSRS w 1941–1942" (PDF). Instytut Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  9. ^ Ocaleni z "nieludzkiej ziemi". p. 48.
  10. ^ Masiarz, Władysław (1997). "Przesiedlenie i repatriacja Polaków z Azji Środkowej w 1946 r.". Zesłaniec (in Polish). No. 2. Warszawa. p. 109.
  11. ^ Iglicka 1998, pp. 998–999
  12. ^ Masiarz, p. 113
  13. ^ Alekseenko 2001, p. 61
  14. ^ Iglicka 1998, pp. 1000–1001
  15. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 April 2003. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  16. ^ "Казахская АССР (1926)". Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  17. ^ "Казахская ССР (1939)". Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  18. ^ "Казахская ССР (1959)". Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  19. ^ "Казахская ССР (1970)". Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  20. ^ "Казахская ССР (1979)". Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  21. ^ "Казахская ССР (1989)". Demoscope Weekly. Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  22. ^ "Ethnic composition of Kazakhstan 2009". Retrieved 11 January 2024.
  23. ^ Grzymala-Moszczynska 2003, p. 189
  24. ^ Grzymala-Moszczynska 2003, p. 189
  25. ^ Grzymala-Moszczynska 2003, p. 192
  26. ^ Grzymala-Moszczynska 2003, pp. 194–195
  27. ^ Grzymala-Moszczynska 2003, p. 195
  28. ^ Grzymala-Moszczynska 2003, p. 194
  29. ^ Poujol 2007, p. 92
  30. ^ Poujol 2007, p. 94
  31. ^ Iglicka 1998, pp. 998–999
  32. ^ Iglicka 1998, pp. 1003–1006

Sources edit

  • Alekseenko, A. N. (2001), "Республика в зеркале переписей населения" (PDF), Sotsiologicheskie Issledovaniia (12): 58–62, archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-30, retrieved 2010-04-14
  • Grzymala-Moszczynska, Malina (2003), "A study of Polish-origin immigrants to Kazakhstan from Poland", in Adler, Leonore Loeb; Gielen, Uwe Peter (eds.), Migration: immigration and emigration in international perspective, Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 978-0-275-97666-8
  • Iglicka, Krystyna (1998), "Are They Fellow Countrymen or Not? The Migration of Ethnic Poles from Kazakhstan to Poland", International Migration Review, 32 (4): 995–1014, JSTOR 2547669
  • Poujol, Catherine (2007), "Poles in Kazakhstan: Between Integration and the Imagined Motherland", Space, Populations, Societies, 4 (1), retrieved 2010-04-14

Further reading edit

  • Budakowska, Elżbieta (1992), "Polacy w Kazachstanie – historia i wspoółczesność", Przegląd Polonijny, 18 (4): 5–37
  • Ciesielski, Stanisław (1997), Polacy w Kazachstanie w latach 1940-1946: zesłańcy lat wojny, Wrocław: W Kolorach Tęczy, ISBN 978-83-901323-5-8, OCLC 37177038
  • Groblewska, Celina (1996), Kazachstańscy Polacy, Polskie Towarzystwo Demograficzne, ISBN 978-83-901912-5-6, OCLC 37306509
  • Kożlowski, Broniṡlaw Jan (2005), Polacy w Kazachstanie, Wybór dokumentów prawnych dotyczących mniejszości narodowych, Warszawa: Stowarzyszenie "Wspólnota Polska", ISBN 978-83-88416-26-2, OCLC 237229149

poles, kazakhstan, form, portion, polish, diaspora, former, soviet, union, slightly, less, than, half, kazakhstan, poles, live, karaganda, region, with, another, astana, almaty, rest, scattered, throughout, rural, regions, polish, women, kazakhstantotal, popul. Poles in Kazakhstan form one portion of the Polish diaspora in the former Soviet Union Slightly less than half of Kazakhstan s Poles live in the Karaganda region with another 2 500 in Astana 1 200 in Almaty and the rest scattered throughout rural regions 3 Poles in KazakhstanPolish women in KazakhstanTotal population29 728 2019 census Regions with significant populationsNorthern Kazakhstan 1 LanguagesPrimarily Russian only 12 claim knowledge of Polish 2 ReligionChristianRelated ethnic groupsPolish diaspora Contents 1 Migration history 1 1 Arrival 1 2 Post Soviet emigration 2 Religion 3 Inter ethnic relations 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Sources 7 Further readingMigration history editArrival edit The first Pole to travel to the territory which today makes up Kazakhstan was probably Benedict of Poland sent as part of the delegation of Pope Innocent IV to the Khagan Guyuk of the Mongol Empire 4 Migration of Poles to Kazakhstan largely of an involuntary character began soon after the Kazakh Khanate came under the control of the Russians Captured participants of the 1830 1831 November Uprising and the 1863 1865 January Uprising as well as members of clandestine organisations were sent into exile throughout the Russian Empire By the time of the Russian Empire Census of 1897 there were already 11 579 Poles in Central Asia 90 per cent male 5 Poles both inside and outside of the Soviet Union would later get caught up in Stalinist population transfers in the late 1930s At least 250 000 Poles from the Polish National Districts of the Soviet Union were deported to the Kazakh SSR in 1930s among those as many as 100 000 did not survive the first winter in the country 6 nbsp Kazakh postal stamp from 2017 commemorating the Polish Anders Army After the Soviet invasion of Poland at the start of World War II another 150 000 Poles were deported from eastern Polish territories to Kazakhstan 80 of these were women and children as the adult men of their community were typically absent due to army service In early 1942 a portion of the Polish Anders Army along with civilians was relocated to southern Kazakhstan whereas the remainder was moved to the Uzbek and Kyrgyz SSRs 7 The 1st Uhlan Regiment the 8th Infantry Division and 10th Infantry Division were stationed in Otar Shokpak and Lugovoy respectively 8 The Poles suffered from epidemics and famine and many died 9 In 1942 the army with many civilians was evacuated to Iran As of 1943 there were still nearly 77 000 Polish citizens in Kazakhstan according to Soviet data 10 After the end of the war people who had been Polish citizens before September 1 1939 were allowed to repatriate to Poland however no provision was made for earlier deportees to leave Kazakhstan 11 After the war over 62 000 Poles were repatriated from Kazakhstan to Poland in 1946 1948 12 The 1970 Soviet census found 61 400 Poles 0 5 of the population in the Kazakh SSR while the 1979 census found 61 100 0 4 and the 1989 census 59 400 0 4 13 However Polish scholars believe these numbers to be underestimates due to the reluctance of Poles to register their true ethnicity in their official documentation and the relative ease of changing one s declared nationality to another such as Ukrainian or Russian they have given numbers ranging from 100 000 to 400 000 14 Post Soviet emigration edit Historical populationYearPop 18971 254 19263 762 200 0 193954 809 1356 9 195953 102 3 1 197061 335 15 5 197961 136 0 3 198959 956 1 9 199947 297 21 1 200934 057 28 0 According to official census data 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 When communist rule in Poland ended there was great political enthusiasm on the part of the new Polish government for facilitating the repatriation of members of the Polish diaspora However up until 1996 there was no formal system for controlling the migration of ethnic Poles from the Soviet Union to Poland Roughly 1 500 Poles from Kazakhstan came to Poland during this period often on tourist visas They were typically granted residency permits but only a few managed to obtain Polish citizenship However legal reforms in 1996 and again in 1998 regularised the immigration procedures allowing any ethnic Pole from abroad to settle in the country upon receiving an invitation from a company or association 23 Prospective emigrants were required to apply at the Polish consulate in Kazakhstan with documentary proof of their Polish ancestry 24 In a 1996 1998 academic survey Poles who had emigrated from Kazakhstan cited a number of reasons for their departure including the decreased social status of non Kazakh speakers in the newly independent country the local economic crisis which saw many salaries go unpaid and the desire to avoid service in the Kazakhstani army Some also claimed to survey takers that their female relatives were in danger of bride kidnapping 25 Due to their experience with agriculture on kolkhoz during communism many of the Poles in Kazakhstan were able to obtain invitations from rural communes in Poland which hoped to revive farms that would otherwise be sold to German expatriates However in practise many were specialised with only one type of skill and lacked familiarity with other aspects of farm operation that they would need in their new lives in Poland 26 In other cases Polish students came to Kazakhstan with grants from the Polish Ministry of Education 100 each year and later invited their family members to join them 27 There were also reports of people from Poland travelling to Kazakhstan and selling invitations at a high price 28 The number of repatriates might be as large as 20 000 and is partially reflected by a decrease in the Kazakhstan census recorded number of Poles in the country 29 Religion editThe first Polish Catholic church for exiles on the steppe was opened at Orenburg in 1844 another was opened in Omsk in 1862 Both cities are today part of Russia By 1917 the church at Petropavlovsk had grown to 3 000 members 30 During the years of exile and assimilation to Soviet Russian society for many Poles the Catholic religion was the only link to their ancestral culture 31 Inter ethnic relations editPoles tend to be settled in multi ethnic regions of Kazakhstan where settlers and exiles of many other nationalities predominated and members of the titular Kazakh nationality were few Interethnic marriages between Poles and members of other European ethnic groups were quite common however those with members of traditionally Muslim ethnic groups were much rarer An anthropological study conducted in 1993 found that Poles generally viewed the Kazakhs as lazy but friendly and generally stated that inter ethnic relations were good 32 See also editKazakhstan Poland relationsNotes edit Poujol 2007 p 92 Iglicka 1998 p 1001 Poujol 2007 p 92 Poujol 2007 p 93 Iglicka 1998 pp 997 998 Iglicka 1998 pp 998 999 Ocaleni z nieludzkiej ziemi in Polish Lodz Instytut Pamieci Narodowej 2012 p 46 ISBN 978 83 63695 00 2 Tworzenie Armii Polskiej w ZSRS w 1941 1942 PDF Instytut Pamieci Narodowej in Polish Retrieved 11 January 2024 Ocaleni z nieludzkiej ziemi p 48 Masiarz Wladyslaw 1997 Przesiedlenie i repatriacja Polakow z Azji Srodkowej w 1946 r Zeslaniec in Polish No 2 Warszawa p 109 Iglicka 1998 pp 998 999 Masiarz p 113 Alekseenko 2001 p 61 Iglicka 1998 pp 1000 1001 Ethnodemographic situation in Kazakhstan PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 April 2003 Retrieved 11 January 2024 Kazahskaya ASSR 1926 Demoscope Weekly Retrieved 11 January 2024 Kazahskaya SSR 1939 Demoscope Weekly Retrieved 11 January 2024 Kazahskaya SSR 1959 Demoscope Weekly Retrieved 11 January 2024 Kazahskaya SSR 1970 Demoscope Weekly Retrieved 11 January 2024 Kazahskaya SSR 1979 Demoscope Weekly Retrieved 11 January 2024 Kazahskaya SSR 1989 Demoscope Weekly Retrieved 11 January 2024 Ethnic composition of Kazakhstan 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2024 Grzymala Moszczynska 2003 p 189 Grzymala Moszczynska 2003 p 189 Grzymala Moszczynska 2003 p 192 Grzymala Moszczynska 2003 pp 194 195 Grzymala Moszczynska 2003 p 195 Grzymala Moszczynska 2003 p 194 Poujol 2007 p 92 Poujol 2007 p 94 Iglicka 1998 pp 998 999 Iglicka 1998 pp 1003 1006Sources editAlekseenko A N 2001 Respublika v zerkale perepisej naseleniya PDF Sotsiologicheskie Issledovaniia 12 58 62 archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 30 retrieved 2010 04 14 Grzymala Moszczynska Malina 2003 A study of Polish origin immigrants to Kazakhstan from Poland in Adler Leonore Loeb Gielen Uwe Peter eds Migration immigration and emigration in international perspective Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 97666 8 Iglicka Krystyna 1998 Are They Fellow Countrymen or Not The Migration of Ethnic Poles from Kazakhstan to Poland International Migration Review 32 4 995 1014 JSTOR 2547669 Poujol Catherine 2007 Poles in Kazakhstan Between Integration and the Imagined Motherland Space Populations Societies 4 1 retrieved 2010 04 14Further reading editBudakowska Elzbieta 1992 Polacy w Kazachstanie historia i wspoolczesnosc Przeglad Polonijny 18 4 5 37 Ciesielski Stanislaw 1997 Polacy w Kazachstanie w latach 1940 1946 zeslancy lat wojny Wroclaw W Kolorach Teczy ISBN 978 83 901323 5 8 OCLC 37177038 Groblewska Celina 1996 Kazachstanscy Polacy Polskie Towarzystwo Demograficzne ISBN 978 83 901912 5 6 OCLC 37306509 Kozlowski Broniṡlaw Jan 2005 Polacy w Kazachstanie Wybor dokumentow prawnych dotyczacych mniejszosci narodowych Warszawa Stowarzyszenie Wspolnota Polska ISBN 978 83 88416 26 2 OCLC 237229149 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poles in Kazakhstan amp oldid 1194905409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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