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Last Days of the Georgian Dukhobors

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  • Last Days of the Georgian Dukhobors

    Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
    Sept 23 2004

    Last Days of the Georgian Dukhobors


    Squeezed out by their neighbours in southern Georgia, the religious
    sect is returning to the land of its forefathers.

    By Mark Grigorian in Gorelovka, Georgia (Photographs by Ruben
    Mangasarian) (CRS No. 254, 23-Sep-04)

    A large loaf of white bread, which our hostess had just pulled out of
    the old Russian stove, was lying on the table surrounded by cheese,
    tomatoes and sour cream. Suddenly a bottle of `samogon', strong
    Russian homemade alcoholic brew, appeared from nowhere as if by
    magic.

    `Oh no, don't pour me any,' 75-year-old Aunt Niura protested in
    embarrassment but took the glass and immediately pronounced a toast.
    `To your health! If your health is strong, then everything else will
    follow. But if not...'

    She was interrupted by her neighbour Nastya, `I just wish that God
    keeps at least a handful of people here. Because if everyone leaves,
    what will become of all of this?'

    `Let's drink to our dear little corner, to our mountains...'

    That little corner is the village of Gorelovka in the mountains of
    southern Georgia, home to some of the last members of the Dukhobor
    sect to remain in the country. Sadly, they may not last long. Almost
    all have close relatives in Russia and almost all are planning to
    emigrate.

    Only fifteen years ago Dukhobors inhabited eight villages, but today
    the community, which once boasted some 7,000 people, shrank to less
    than 700.

    Dukhobors (the Russian word means `spirit wrestlers') are ethnic
    Russians, representatives of a rare Christian Orthodox sect expelled
    to the Caucasus in the mid-nineteenth century.

    They do not recognise the church or priests, but believe that each
    man's soul is a temple. Dukhobors do not worship the cross or icons
    and they reject the church sacraments. They believe that Jesus Christ
    transmigrated into God's chosen people - the Dukhobors. The life of
    every Dukhobor should serve as an example for others because love and
    joy, peacefulness and patience, faith, humility and abstinence, reign
    in each believer.

    In the late 19th century, having become acquainted with the ideas of
    the great writer and pacifist Leo Tolstoy, the Dukhobors refused to
    serve in the Russian Tsar's army. And in 1895 they famously collected
    together all their weaponry and set fire to it.

    `The Dukhobors put all the weapons into one big pile and lit it up,'
    said Tatyana Chuchmayeva, leader of the Dukhobor community in
    Georgia. `When the government called in the Cossacks, they stood
    around the fire holding each other's hands and sang psalms and
    peaceful songs. All the time the Cossacks were flogging them with
    whips.'

    Many of those who burned the weapons were punished and around 500
    families were exiled to Siberia. However, Tolstoy managed, with the
    help of English Quakers, to organise the resettlement of Dukhobors to
    Canada where they were spared military service.

    Many others stayed in Georgia and survived all the tribulations of
    the 20th century.

    However, life under independent Georgia has proved the biggest test.
    Two censuses conducted in 1989 and 2002 show that of 340,000 Russians
    that lived in Georgia in 1989 less than ten per cent - about 32,500
    people - remained there thirteen years later. Other ethnic minorities
    also left.

    Fyodor Goncharov, chairman of the Gorelovka village council, said
    that the first wave of emigration occurred in 1989-1991 when the
    extreme nationalist Zviad Gamsakhurdia was leader of Georgia. About
    half of the Dukhobor population left the region.

    In the late 1980s, the Merab Kostava Foundation was set up in Tbilisi
    with the stated aim of making Georgians the dominant ethnic group.
    They focussed strong attention on the southern province of
    Samtskhe-Javakheti, where over 90 per cent were ethnic-Armenians and
    the rest, with few exceptions, were Russian Dukhobors.

    The Merab Kostava Foundation bought about 200 of the Dukhobors'
    houses and gave these to Georgians. Clothes and funds were provided
    to the new arrivals.

    However, the experiment failed. `They could not endure our living
    conditions and ran away from here after one year,' said Konstantin
    Vardanian, a journalist from the local town of Ninotsminda. `During
    the first winter they heated their houses with coal and firewood that
    the foundation had left for them. Then, after they ran out of coal,
    they lived in one room of the house and pulled up floors in the other
    rooms and burnt them in stoves. When spring came they all left.'

    Local Armenians were alarmed by the Merab Kostava project and one
    result was that the Armenian Javakh Committee, founded to fight for
    Armenian rights in Javakheti, also began to buy houses from Dukhobors
    - just to keep them out of Georgian hands. `It was some sort of
    competition, really,' Vardanian said, with Armenians and Georgians
    vying for the same houses in Dukhobor villages.

    At first, Armenians enjoyed being neighbours to the Dukhobors.
    `Akhalkalaki people always preferred to buy butter, cheese, curd
    cheese and other dairy products from Dukhobors,' remembers Karine
    Khodikian, a well-known Armenian writer originally from the local
    town of Akhalkalaki. `It was a sign of respect for them, their
    cleanliness and tidiness.'

    But after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Armenians got envious of
    the Dukhobors and their apparently orderly, calm lives. `Armenians
    saw that the Dukhobor community in Gorelovka was self-sustaining,
    they said that Canadians Dukhobors helped it,' Vardanian said.

    Armenians from mountain villages, where living conditions were much
    worse than in Gorelovka, began to move into the houses purchased by
    the Javakhk Committee and to buy land. They were joined by immigrants
    from Armenia who used to live in the city of Gumri and its
    neighbouring villages - a region almost entirely demolished by the
    1988 earthquake. Relations between the Dukhobors and these newcomers
    was far worse than with their old neighbours.

    Enterprising Armenians opened small shops and started producing sour
    cream, butter and cheese, traditional Dukhobor products. They
    purchase milk from the Dukhobors, but the latter are very unhappy
    with the buying prices.

    `Armenians buy milk in our village,' said Goncharov. `Then they make
    cheese out of it, take it to Tbilisi and sell it. They pay us only 30
    tetri for a litre (about 15 cents), while we have to pay 70 or 80
    tetri just for one litre of fuel.'

    Dukhobor villager Sveta Gonachrova said that her neighbours were
    frightened by the incoming Armenians, `You step outside and get
    punched in the face.'

    Vardanian believes that antipathy between the Dukhobors and Armenians
    is not the only reason Dukhobors are leaving, but `it contributed'.

    This new wave of emigration has found help from the Russian
    authorities.

    In December 1998, Russia's then-prime minister Yevgeny Primakov
    signed a decree on assistance to the Georgian Dukhobors and the
    Russian parliament, the State Duma passed a special resolution on the
    group. The International Organisation for Migration helped with the
    resettlement, while Georgia's emergencies ministry provided buses.

    In January 1999, community leader Lyuba Goncharova led a large number
    of her community on a journey whose final point of destination was
    the Bryansk region of Russia. Many of those left behind are now
    seeking help from the Russian embassy in Tbilisi to go and join them.

    The remaining Dukhobors say they are worried by Georgia's new
    president, Mikheil Saakashvili, whom they see as a Georgian
    nationalist. There are also rumours in the community - denied by
    Georgian officials - that all non-Georgian schools will be closed.

    `Saakashvili's rise to power scares everyone,' said Chuchmayeva.
    `Everyone is panic-stricken. People see what is happening in (South)
    Ossetia and feel scared,' she added in a reference to Saakashvili's
    attempts to restore central authority to that breakaway region.

    `Now they are talking about making all schools switch to the Georgian
    language... And that scares people. They are terrified that main
    subjects in schools will be taught in Georgian from 2006 and our
    children will not be able to study.'

    Georgia's minister for refugees and migration, Eter Astemirova, told
    IWPR that `the main reason they are leaving, as far as I know, is due
    to problems with the local Armenian population. There is no basis to
    their worries about the Georgian language or schools'.

    Astemirova said the Georgian state was entirely neutral in the
    affair. Dukhobors are not helped `to leave or to stay', she said. `If
    there is a problem, we will try to address it. ... So far, I don't
    know, because we have no information about Dukhobors.'

    The cultural attaché of the Russian embassy in Tbilisi, Vasily
    Korchmar, said another reason for the Dukhobors' desire to leave is
    the difficult economic situation in Georgia and its tense
    relationship with Russia.

    Gonachrova agreed that tradition counted for nothing as this
    community made up its mind. For young people in particular life is
    better in Russia than in Gorelovka, `We are sorry to leave, but what
    can one do? There are [proper] conditions for young people in Russia.
    Discos and all sorts of amusement. We have nothing.'

    Mark Grigorian is a producer with the Central Asian and Caucasus
    Service of the BBC World Service in London.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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