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Paradise
on the Steppe: A Cultural History of the Kutschurgan, Beresan, and
Liebental Colonies, 1804 - 1972
By Joseph S. Height
North Dakota Historical Society of Germans from Russia, Bismarck,
North Dakota, 1973, 411 pages, hardcover
Book review by Edna Boardman, Minot, North Dakota (EBoard@minot.com)
Joseph Height, who was born in 1909 in Saskatchewan,
Canada, focuses on the Catholic
Kutschurgan, Beresan, and Liebental colonies in this
book. (Twenty-three percent of the
Germans living in South Russia were Catholic.) He
goes into detail about the turmoil that made
the Czar's invitation most welcome to the farmers and
craftsmen of Germany and France in the
1760s. Harsh, constantly-shifting policies
destabilized the people in and around Alsace, the
Palatinate, Baden, and Wurttemberg. People who fled
foreign armies in fear were punished as
traitors a short time later. The Czarina Catherine's
representatives who entered this scene spun a
good line. Their promise of free land and assurance
of wonderful freedoms tugged at the
people's dreams.
Height follows the settlers on the often disastrous
journey to Russia and through the difficult early
years when colonists first tilled the iron-hard soil
and brought the snake and wolf populations
under control. Cossack soldiers patrolled the borders
to prevent the colonists from returning to
Germany, and few would risk becoming victims of their
brutal treatment. The Colonists' Welfare
Committee, led by forward-looking men such as the Duc
Armand de Richelieu, who was also
the governor of Odessa, kept the reluctant pioneers
afloat and goaded them to plant fruit trees
and vineyards. An Odessa greenhouse created at
Richelieu's behest provided stock!
He describes the founding of the seminary at Saratov
and of the Tiraspol Diocese, which was in
existence only long enough to have five bishops. The
priests, first Polish then sons of the
colonists, ministered to the people and enriched
their lives with ritual and music and religious
organizations. They cared for the sick and
indigent. Even young men who did not stay through
ordination proved of great value. They became
teachers, civic leaders, and the village
intelligentsia. They provided the stimulation that
kept the colonists from becoming as backward
as their peasant neighbors.
Height has accumulated appealing
information: festivals, songs, sayings, language, letters home,
and pictures of lovely churches. There are town plats
of Kutschurgan, Beresan and Liebental
villages. Those whose families originally settled
there may find their forebears' names in little
rectangles on town maps. He deals with the
out-migration as large numbers left for the Americas
and with the devastation of the villages and the
deportation of the people to the north and east by
the Communists. This book is a good choice if you are
curious about the layout of homes, about
the education system, what triggered all the
migrating, and finally what became of the many who
stayed under Stalin.
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| Colonist homes in
Selz, Kutschurgan District, circa 1927. |
St. Gabriel's Catholic
Church, Elsass, Kutschurgan District, circa 1909. |
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| Brass band in Rastadt,
Beresan District, circa 1939. |
Students of the
Girl's School and Miss Emilie Schardt, teacher, Karlsruhe, Beresan
District. |
Paradise on the Steppe
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