July
11, 1999
Toews, John. JOURNEYS: MENNONITE STORIES OF FAITH AND SURVIVAL IN STALIN'S
RUSSIA. Kindred Publications. Winnipeg MB R2L 2E5 and Hillsboro KS 67063. 1998.
This review is by Edna Boardman. If you wish to repost it or print it and have
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message to [email protected]
Here is a book that will help
to answer some questions for persons wondering what happened to ethnic Germans,
perhaps their own relatives, who were caught up in the persecutions and
deportations of Stalinist Russia. (A book reviewed earlier in this series
contained a diary composed DURING a deportee's experience, which was very rare
because of monitoring in the camps. This book is SIBERIAN DIARY OF ARON P.
TOEWS, WITH A BIOGRAPHY by Olga Rempel. Translated by Esther Klaassen Bergen,
Edited by Lawrence Klippenstein. Available through CMBC Publications, 600
Shaftsbury Blvd, Winnipeg, MB R3P OM4. Also from the Germans from Russia
Heritage Society for $8.50.)
JOURNEYS... contains four
personal stories, two by women, two by men, written long after they were
released from their places of exile. The author puts their experiences into
historical context with an opening chapter called "Understanding the
Memoirs." The events of the communist-takeover period and World War II are
little understood by most who emigrated in the late 1800s or early 1900s. It is
an excellent historical summary that includes the little-known fact that, in
the mid 1920s, more than 20,000 Mennonites left Russia. Toews says of the
Germans in Russia, "They viewed themselves as separate from their host
society, yet cherished Russia as their homeland." He observes that women
had no distance or detachment from their experiences. Men more likely sought to
control what was happening to them.
The first memoir is that of
Anna Kroeker, born in the village of Karapetan in Turkistan, Kirghizia on
February 25, 1902. Her family had already moved from the Ukraine to find land
in the Asiatic Soviet Union. She hungered for an education, but it was not to
be. She told what had happened to her husband's family before their marriage.
"They did not voluntarily join the collective and so the collective farm
confiscated all of Abraham Kroeker's possessions--gardens, barns, horses, cows,
young livestock, sheep, yard and house. Everything inside was taken including
the cupboards and a bag containing patches. His oldest daughter was in the
middle of cooking dinner when some of the leaders of the collective came in
demanding that she dump the food so they could take the cooking pot and sell
it. She refused, and although she was allowed to keep the pot, the consequence
of her noncooperation resulted in Abraham's imprisonment. His seven children
were then turned out onto the street with the threat that anyone who helped
them would be similarly treated. The youngest was four years old. A family did
help the children, and Anna married their father. Her story includes being torn
from her crying children some years later and being sent off to work in the
trud army. Her assignment was to work on a canal, digging up frozen-solid
earth. Women did aid each other's survival when they could.
Justina Martens's story begins
in 1930. A good storyteller, she speaks of the role of neighbors in taking care
of each other and of the lack of food. Her father was grabbed for hiding
literature. So many men disappeared in 1937-1938. She and her children, sent to
the far north, lived in the home of Russians who, understandably, hardly wanted
them there. She describes life on a collective farm and the faith she clung to
with all her might. Though it seems that women were more likely to survive than
men, the stories of the men, Abram Berg and Aron Warkentin, are less
heartrending than those of the women because they did things to try to control
their situation. As the train that took him to exile left the station, Berg
threw out envelopes addressed to his family, hoping that bystanders would mail
them. They did. He says that children continued to be born in the camps no
matter what measures the authorities took. One couple had three children. The
man, released first, took them and cared for them until the woman was released
and they could marry. Some abandoned their children when they were released.
Aron Warkentin, sent to a camp in the northern forests, cleverly marketed his
skills as a carpenter and as a man competent in the care of horses. He gathered
to himself others from his village and they figured out how to live a little
warmer and eat a little better than the rules allowed. When Warkentin realized
that he was about to be betrayed, arrested, and sent heaven-knows-where, he
took direct action and turned the tables on his accusers. He says, "Those
of us who were drawn into this harsh and unexplainable system knew how
important it was to fight for life as long as we were able."
The communists in Moscow may
have had a plan, but it was difficult for persons on the receiving end of the
policies to understand it. Officials pretended to do things by law. There were
warrants, arrests, trials with testimony, appeals, and sentences of specific
numbers of years. Only a few were ever acquitted. The people experienced
confiscation of property, uprooting of established lifestyles, tearing apart of
family life, starvation, deportation, limitations on food with food tied
directly to work, and prohibition of religious belief and practice. Small
things became important to survival--things such as did they take warm clothing
along when they were deported and could they form mutual-aid relationships with
others along the way.