Narodopisna Revue
2018, Pages 51-63
Festivities and everyday life of Russian “white” émigrés in Prague exile in blending of history and memories [Festivity a každodennost Ruských „bílých“emigrantů v pražském exilu v prolínání historie a vzpomínek] (Review)
Nosková H.*
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a
Ústav pro soudobé dějiny, AV, ČR, Praha, Czech Republic
Abstract
The study focuses on the history of the Russian white émigrés in the then Czechoslovakia. The author shows that the white émigrés were perceived by the then Czechoslovak government as the future intelligentsia for new free Russia and for independent and free Ukraine. The emigrants were offered the opportunity of completing their studies, continuing their creative activities, or extending their education. The emigrants founded their own professional institutions, organized social life even for the Czech majority to make it familiar with the Russian culture. To the Czech environment, they translocated some of their festivals associated with Orthodoxy and folk tradition. After the Czechoslovak-Soviet Treaty of Alliance was signed (1935), the emigrants´ position got worse. The activity of domestic communists introduced Soviet festivities to Czechoslovakia. After 1945, new Soviet citizens arrived in Czechoslovakia, and the white émigrés became a persecuted group. Some of them were abducted to Soviet forced labour camps (Gulag) by Russian bodies. The domestic communists implanted new Soviet festivals, feasts and ceremonies – Great October Socialist Revolution celebrations, Grandfather Frost and others – with the help of the Association of Czechoslovak-Soviet Friendship in Czechoslovakia. In 2001, the Czech Republic officially acknowledged the Russian national minority that got its historical rights as a minority thanks to the Russian white émigrés in the 1920s. Several associations within the minority try to renew original Russian traditions and feasts in the Czech environment. © 2018 National Institute of Folk Culture. All rights reserved.
Author Keywords
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85046138876&partnerID=40&md5=41bf6b02b07451224c826cbea8ce76af
ISSN: 08628351
Original Language: Slovak