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Appeal For Help
by
Vladimir G. Chertkov, Pavel I. Biryukov & Ivan M. Tregubov
Vladimir
Grigorievich Chertkov (1854-1936), Pavel Ivanovich Biryukov (1860-1931)
and Ivan Mikhailovich Tregubov were Tolstoyan writers who supported the
Doukhobor cause of pacifism. Their appeal, "Pomogite: Obrashchenie k
Obshchestvu po Povodu Gonenii na Kavkazskikh Dukhoborov" (London: 1896)
helped publicize the persecution of the Doukhobors in the Caucasus. The
following excerpt is taken from the English translation, "Appeal for
Help" (London: 1897).
A
terrible cruelty is now being perpetrated in the Caucasus. More than four
thousand people are suffering and dying from hunger, disease, exhaustion,
blows, tortures, and other persecutions at the hands of the Russian authorities.
These
suffering people are the Doukhobors (or "Spirit Wrestlers" as the word
means) of the Caucasus. They are enduring persecution, because their religious
convictions do not allow them to fulfil those demands of the State which
are connected, directly or indirectly, with the killing of, or violence
to, their fellow man.
Brief and fragmentary notices of these remarkable people have not infrequently
appeared of late in the Russian and foreign press. But all that has been
published in the Russian newspapers has been either too short, or in a mutilated
form - whether intentionally, unintentionally, or as a concession to the
requirements of the Russian censor; while what has been printed abroad is,
unfortunately, little accessible to the Russian public. Hence it is that we
consider it our duty in this Appeal to give a general view of the events that
are now taking place, and a brief sketch of the circumstances which preceded
them
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Vladimir G.
Chertkov
(1854-1936) |
The
Doukhobors first appeared in the middle of last century. By the end of
the last century or the beginning of the present (ie. 19th century) their
doctrine had become so clearly defined, and the number of their followers
had so greatly increased, that the Government and the Church, considering
this sect to be peculiarly obnoxious, started a cruel persecution.
The
foundation of the Doukhobors' teaching consists in the belief that the
Spirit of God is present in the soul of man, and directs him by its word
within him.
They
understand the coming of Christ in the flesh, His works, teachings, and
sufferings, in a spiritual sense. The object of the sufferings of Christ
in their view, was to give us an example of suffering for truth. Christ
continues to suffer in us even now, when we do not live in accordance with
the behest and spirit of His teaching. The whole teaching of the Doukhobors
is penetrated with the gospel spirit of love.
Worshipping
God in the spirit, the Doukhobors affirm that the outward Church and all
that is performed in it and concerns it has no importance for them. The
Church is where two or three are gathered together, united, in the
name of Christ. They
pray inwardly at all times; while, on fixed days (corresponding for convenience
to the Orthodox holy days), they assemble for prayer meetings, at which
they read prayers and sing hymns, or psalms as they call them, and greet
each other fraternally with low bows, thereby acknowledging every man as
a bearer of the Divine Spirit.
The
teaching of the Doukhobors is founded on tradition. This tradition is called
among them the Book of Life because it lives in their memory and
hearts. It consists of psalms, partly formed out of the contents of the
Old and New Testaments, partly composed independently.
The
Doukhobors found alike their mutual relations and their relations to other
people - and not only to people, but to all living creatures - exclusively
on love; and therefor, they hold all people equal brethren. They extend
this idea of equality also to the Government authorities; obedience to
whom they do not consider binding upon them in those cases when the demands
of these authorities are in conflict with their conscience; while, in all
that does not infringe what they regard as the will of God, they willingly
fulfil the desire of the authorities.
They
consider murder, violence, and in general all relations to living beings
not based on love, as opposed to their conscience, and to the will of God.
The Doukhobors are industrious and abstemious in their lives, and always
truthful in their speech, accounting all lying a great sin. Such, in their
most general character, are the beliefs for which the Doukhobors have long
endured cruel persecution.
The
Emperor Alexander I, in one of his prescripts concerning the Doukhobors,
dated the 9th December, 1816, expressed himself as follows: "All the measures
of severity exhausted upon the Spirit Wrestlers during the thirty years
up to 1801, not only did not destroy this sect, but more and more multiplied
the number of its adherents." And therefor he proposed more humane treatment
of them. But, notwithstanding this desire of the Emperor, the persecutions
did not cease.
Under
Nicholas I, they were particularly enforced, and by his command, in the
years '40 and '50 the Doukhobors were all banished from the government
of Taurus (Tavria) where they were formerly settled, to Transcaucasia,
near the Turkish frontier. "The utility of this measure is evident," says
a previous resolution of the Committee of Ministers of the 6th February,
1826, "they (the Doukhobors) being transported to the extreme borders of
the Caucasus, and being always confronted by the hillsmen, must of necessity
protect their property and families by force of arms," ie. they would have
to renounce their convictions. Moreover the place appointed for their settlement,
the so-called Wet Mountains, was one (situated in what is now the Akhalkalak
district of the Tiflis government) having a severe climate, standing 5,000
feet above the sea level, in which barley grows with difficulty, and where
the crops are often destroyed by frost. Others of the Doukhobors were planted
in the present government of Elizavetpol.
But
neither the severe climate nor the neighbourhood of wild and warlike hillsmen
shook the faith of the Doukhobors, who, in the course of the half century
they passed in the Wet Mountains, transformed this wilderness into flourishing
colonies, and continued to lived the same Christian and laborious life
they had lived before. But, as nearly always happens with people, the temptation
of the wealth which they attained to in the Caucasus weakened their moral
force, and little by little they began to depart somewhat from the requirements
of their belief.
But,
while temporarily departing, in the external relations of life, from the
claims of their conscience, they did not, in their inner consciousness,
renounce the basis of their beliefs; and therefor, as soon as events happened
among them which disturbed their outward tranquility, the religious spirit
which had guided their fathers immediately revived within them.
In
1887, universal military service was introduced in the Caucasus; and even
those for whom it was formerly (in consideration of their religious convictions)
replaced by other service or by banishment, were called upon to serve.
This measure took the Doukhobors unawares, and at first they outwardly
submitted to it; but they never in their consciences renounced the belief
that war is a great sin, and they exhorted their sons taken as recruits,
though they submitted to the various regulations of the service, never
to make actual use of their arms. Nevertheless, the introduction of the
conscription among people who considered every murder and act of violence
against their fellow men to be a sin, greatly alarmed them, and caused
them to think over the degree to which they had departed from their belief.
At
the same time, in consequence of an illegal decision of the Government
departments and officials, the right to the possession of the public property
of the Doukhobors (valued at half a million roubles) passed from the community
to one of their members, who, for his own personal advantage, had betrayed
the public interest. This called forth the protest of the majority of the
Doukhobors against this individual and his party, who hd thus become possessed
of the public property, and against the corrupt local administration which
had been bribed to give an unjust decision in the case.
When,
besides this, several representatives of the majority, and among them the
manager (ie. Peter Vasilievich Verigin) elected to administrate the communal
property, were banished to the government of Archangel, this awakening
assumed a very definite character.
The
majority of the Doukhobors (about twelve thousand in number) resolved to
hold fast to the traditions left them by their fathers. They renounced
tobacco, wine, meat, and every kind of excess, divided up all their property
(thus supplying the needs of those who were then in want), and they collected
a new public fund. In connection with this return to a strictly Christian
life, they also renounced all participation in acts of violence, and therefor
refused military service.
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The Burning of Arms, 1895. Painting by Terry McLean. |
In
confirmation of the sincerity of their decision not to use violence even
for their own defence, in the summer of 1895, the Doukhobors of the "Great
Party" as they were called, burnt all their arms which they, like all the
inhabitants of the Caucasus, kept for their protection, and those who were
in the army refused to continue service. By general resolution, they fixed
on the night of 28th June for the purpose of burning their arms, which
were their own property and therefor at their absolute disposal. This holocaust
was accompanied by the singing of psalms, and was carried out simultaneously
in three places, namely, in the governments of Tiflis and Elizavetpol and
in the territory of Kars. In the latter district it passed off without
interference; in the government of Elizavetpol it resulted in the imprisonment
of forty Doukhobors, who are still in confinement; while in the government
of Tiflis the action taken by the local administration resulted in the
perpetration by the troops of a senseless, unprovoked, and incredibly savage
attack on those defenceless people, and in their cruel ill treatment.
The
Burning of Arms in the Tiflis government was appointed to take place near
the village of Goreloe, inhabited by Doukhobors belonging to the "Small
Party" in whose hands was the public property they had appropriated. This
party having learnt the intention of the "Great Party" to burn their weapons,
were either afraid of such an assembly, or wished to slander them, and
informed the authorities that the Doukhobors of the "Great Party" were
devising a rising and preparing to make an armed attack upon the village
of Goreloe. The local authorities, then, without verifying the truth of
this information, ordered out the Cossacks and infantry to the place of
the imaginary riot. The Cossacks arrived at the place of assembly of the
Doukhobors in the morning, when the bonfire, which had destroyed their
arms, was already burning out, and they made two cavalry attacks upon these
men and women, who had voluntarily disarmed themselves and were singing
hymns, and the troops beat them with their whips in the most inhuman manner.
After
this, a whole series of persecutions was commenced against all the Doukhobors
belonging to the "Great Party". First of all, the troops called out were
quartered "in execution" on the Doukhobors' settlements, ie. the property
and the inhabitants themselves of these settlements were placed at the
disposal of the officers, soldiers, and Cossacks quartered in these villages.
Their property was plundered, and the inhabitants themselves were insulted
and maltreated in every way, while the women were flogged with whips and
some of them violated. The men, numbering about three hundred, who had
refused active service, were thrown into prison or sent to a penal battalion.
Afterwards,
more than four hundred families of Doukhobors in Akhalkalak were
torn from their prosperous holdings and splendidly cultivated land, and
after the forced sale, for a mere trifle, of their property, they were
banished from the Akhalkalak district to four other districts of the Tiflis
government, and scattered among the Georgian villages, from one to five
families to each village, and there abandoned to their fate.
As
early as last autumn, epidemics such as fevers, typhus, diphtheria, and
dysentery, appeared among the Doukhobors (scattered as above stated), with
the result that the mortality increased largely, especially among the children.
The Doukhobors had been exiled from a cold mountain climate and settled
in the hot Caucasian valleys, where even the natives suffered from fevers;
and consequently nearly all the Doukhobors are sick, partly because (not
having dwellings of their own) they are huddled together in hired quarters;
but chiefly because they lack means of subsistence.
Their
only earnings are from daily labour among the population amidst whom they
have been thrown, and beyond the bounds of whose villages they are not
allowed to go. But these earnings are very small, the more so that the
native population suffered this year both from a bad harvest and from inundations.
Those who are settled near the railway pick up something by working there,
and share the wages they get with the rest. But this is only a drop in
the ocean of their common want.
The
material position of the Doukhobors is getting worse and worse every day.
The exiles have no other food than bread, and sometimes there is a lack
of even this. Already among the majority of them certain eye diseases,
which are the sure harbingers of scurvy, have appeared.
In
one place of exile situated in the Signak district, 106 deaths occurred
among 100 families (about 1,000 people) settled there. In the Gory
district, 147 deaths occurred among 190 families. In the Tionet
district, 83 deaths occurred among 100 families. In the Dushet district,
20 deaths occurred among 72 families. Almost all are suffering from diseases,
and disease and mortality are constantly increasing.
Besides
these deaths there have been others (due to actual violence) among the
Doukhobors in prison and in the penal battalion. The first to die in this
way, in July 1895, was Kirill Konkin, the cause of death being blows received
as corporal punishment. He died on the road, before reaching the place
of his exile, in a state of hallucination, which commenced while he was
being flogged. Next, in August 1896, died Mikhail Shcherbinin in the Ekaterinograd
penal battalion, tortured to death by flogging, and by being thrown with
violence over the wooden horse in the gymnasium. Among those confined in
the prisons many have already died. Some of them, while dying, were locked
up in separate rooms, and neither their fellow prisoners, nor parents,
wives and children who had come to bid them farewell, were allowed even
to enter the room while the dying lay alone and helpless. More deaths are
to be expected both among the population suffering from want in exile and
in the prisons.
The
Doukhobors themselves do not ask for help - neither those who are in exile
with their families, famished, and with starving and sick children, nor
those who are being slowly but surely tortured to death in the prisons.
They die without uttering a single cry for help, knowing why and for what
they suffer. But we, who see these sufferings, and know about them, cannot
remain unmoved.
But
how to help them?
There
are only two means to help people persecuted for faith's sake. One consists
in the fulfilment of the Christian commandment, to welcome the stranger,
clothe the naked, visit the sick and imprisoned, and feed the hungry, which
is prescribed to us both by our own hearts and by the Gospel; the other
consists in appealing to the persecutors, both to those who prescribe the
persecutions and to those who allow them to take place when they might
stop them; and also to those who, without sympathizing with the persecutions,
participate in them and become their means - appealing by laying bare before
these persecutors the sin, the cruelty, and the folly of their acts.
Having
been in a position sooner than others to know what has here been set forth,
we appeal alike to Russians and to non Russians to help our brethren in
their present sore distress, both with money offerings to relieve the sufferings
of the aged, sick, and children, and by raising their voices on behalf
of the persecuted.
The
most important and grateful means of expressing sympathy with the persecuted,
and of softening the hearts of the persecutors, would be personally to
visit the victims, in order to see with one's own eyes what is being done
with them now, and to make the truth about them generally known.
The
expression of sympathy is dear to the Doukhobors, because although they
do not ask for help, they yet have no greater joy than to see the manifestation
of love and pity to them on the part of others - of that same love for
the sake of which these martyrs are sacrificing their lives.
The
making publicly known of the truth about the Doukhobors is important, because
it cannot be that the Russian State authorities really desire to exterminate
these people by the inexorable demand from them of that which their conscience
does not allow them to do, and the ceaseless persecution and torture of
them on this account. There is probably here some misunderstanding, and
therefor it is that the promulgation of the truth which may remove this
is specially important.
Help!
Editorial Note
The
above appeal attained its purpose by drawing the attention both of the
public and of the higher authorities to the persecution of the Doukhobors
by the local authorities of the Caucasus. But for the three friends who
signed it, the result was their banishment. Two of them, Biryukov and Tregubov,
were exiled to small towns in the Baltic provinces; while Chertkov was given the
choice between the same sentence and being altogether exiled from Russia. He
chose the latter as affording him the possibility of helping, from abroad in
England, his persecuted friends, which would have been impossible under the
conditions of strict police supervision under which those banished within Russia
had to live - JJK. |
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