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Blahoslovenie Creek Commemorates Kylemore Doukhobors
For Immediate Release -
January 4, 2007
A creek near Kylemore, Saskatchewan has been
officially named to commemorate the Doukhobor settlers of the area.
Blahoslovenie Creek, the name proposed by Doukhobor researcher and writer
Jonathan J. Kalmakoff, was recently approved by the Saskatchewan Geographic
Names Board.
Blahoslovenie Creek is a small, seasonal stream which originates one kilometre
west of Kylemore and winds south-eastward along an eight kilometre course before
draining into Fishing Lake. Several marshes, wetlands and smaller streams feed
the creek. Rain, snowmelt and groundwater contribute to its flow. Eighteen
square kilometres of farmland – approximately eighteen hundred hectares – drain
into the creek.
The name Blahoslovenie is the Russian term for ‘blessing’. “The name reflects
the fertility and abundance of the land surrounding the creek,” said Kalmakoff,
a leading authority on Doukhobor geographic names. “It also embodies the
spiritual and cultural heritage of the Doukhobor pioneers who settled and
developed the creek’s watershed.”
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View of Blahoslovenie Creek from Highway No. 5 west of Kylemore. |
In 1917-1918, Doukhobors belonging to the Christian Community of Universal
Brotherhood (CCUB) purchased over four thousand five hundred hectares of land in
the Kylemore area. There, under the motto of ‘Toil and Peaceful Life’, they
cleared the forest, broke the land and established fourteen communal villages as
well as a central store, warehouse, elevator, prayer home, blacksmith shop,
granaries and barns. The communal farming enterprise at Kylemore lasted
approximately twenty years. Following the collapse of the CCUB in 1937-1939, the
land was sold and many of the Doukhobors relocated to British Columbia. Those
who remained in the area – approximately ten families – became independent
farmers. Many of their descendants still farm the original CCUB landholdings.
“The Doukhobors at Kylemore had a close association with the creek,” said
Kalmakoff. “The creek flowed through the heart of the communal settlement. The
Doukhobors lived and farmed along its banks and used its waters for domestic and
agricultural purposes as well as recreational activities. Many of the Doukhobor
pioneers were buried, fittingly, near the source of the creek.”
The official name comes after three years of consultations by Kalmakoff to
gather feedback on the suitability and acceptance of the name from persons
familiar with the area. The positive response was tremendous. Local Doukhobor
residents supported the naming project. The Rural Municipality of Sasman No. 336
passed a resolution in favour of the name. As well, the Fishing Lake First
Nation No. 89 passed a resolution endorsing the name.
The consultations were followed by a formal proposal to the Saskatchewan
Geographic Names Board, the Provincial body responsible for place names. The
Board reviewed and investigated the name proposal in consultation with
government departments and agencies. In its deliberations, the Board was guided
by the Geographic Naming Policies, a rigorous set of principles governing the
naming of geographic features. Its decision – which was solidly in favour of the
name Blahoslovenie Creek – was then recommended to the Minister Responsible for
the Board, the Hon. Eric Cline, Q.C. who approved the decision.
Now that the name is official, the Saskatchewan Geographic Names Board will
supply the information to government ministries and agencies, cartographers,
publishers and other persons engaged in the preparation of maps and publications
intended for official and public use.
“The naming of Blahoslovenie Creek signifies that the Doukhobor contribution to
the history and development of the Kylemore area was substantial ,” said
Kalmakoff. “It will be an important historic reference for Doukhobors and their
future generations.”
For additional information
or inquiries about
Blahoslovenie Creek, email
Jonathan J. Kalmakoff. |
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