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The
Doukhobor Monuments of Efremovka and Rodionovka
by
Jonathan J. Kalmakoff
In 1845,
the Doukhobors of Efremovka and Rodionovka villages in Tavria province, Russia
were exiled for their faith to the Caucasus mountain region. Upon their
departure, they erected stone monuments in their villages to commemorate this
momentous event. Although the existence of the monuments is documented in two
19th century Russian texts, no trace of them remains today. The following
article examines what is known about the Efremovka and Rodionovka monuments, and their
significance to the archaeology of the Molochnaya Doukhobors. Translations by
Jack McIntosh.
In 2006, a local
historian in Zaporiz’ka oblast, Ukraine discovered an ancient stone monument
erected by the Doukhobors of Bogdanovka upon their exile from the village in
1844. The find was historically and culturally significant, as it was the only
Doukhobor relic of its kind known to have been found anywhere in the Molochnaya
region.
Now, a recent study of Russian historical records by the writer reveals not one
but two other monuments raised by Doukhobors during the same era. Memorial
stones similar to the one at Bogdanovka were left by the Doukhobors of Efremovka
and Rodionovka upon their departure from these villages in 1845. This latest
discovery sheds new light on the archeology of the Molochnaya Doukhobors.
The existence of the Efremovka and Rodionovka monuments is attested to in two
19th century Russian texts: Mikhail Rodionov’s 1872 work,
Statistiko-khronologiko-istoricheskoe opisanie Tavricheskoi eparkhii: obshchii i
chastnyi obzor" (Simferopol': v tipografii S. Spiro, 1872), and Bishop Germogen’s 1887
work, Tavricheskaya Eparkhiya (Pskov: Tipografiya Gubernskago Pravleniya, 1887).
Both authors were Orthodox clerics who conducted detailed statistical analyses
of the villages, towns and parishes of the Orthodox diocese of Tavria province.
In doing so, they compiled a rich collection of invaluable local historical
information not recorded anywhere else.
The inscription of the Efremovka monument is preserved in its entirety in both
Rodionov’s and Germogen’s texts. The original Russian inscription reads:
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“Вечное память родителей праведныхь именованныхь
духоборцевь погребенныхь спасали и спасались души своихь кротостью и
смиренностью и благоуродно Богу и Государю собрать нась на обетованную землю
вь Таврическую губернию вь 1805 году. Вь 1845 году переселены на Кавказь 15
мая изь села Ефремовки Духоборець Б-ий.”
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The English translation
of the Efremovka memorial inscription may be read as follows:
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"Eternal memory of buried upright forebears
named Dukhobortsy; they were saving their souls and were saved through
meekness and humility, and it pleased God and the Sovereign to gather us to
the promised land in Tavria Province in 1805. On May 15, 1845 we were
resettled in the Caucasus from the village of Efremovka.
B-iy - a Dukhoborets."
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The Rodionovka memorial inscription is not reproduced in either text; however,
Rodionov states that it had the same kind of inscription as the Efremovka
monument. The Bogdanovka memorial inscription, reproduced in Germogen, is
virtually identical to that of the Efremovka monument, save for references to
villages and dates.
As noted by Jack McIntosh, former UBC Slavic languages bibliographer, these inscriptions are shorter
versions of the Doukhobor psalm, “Vechnaya pamyat’…” as published in Sbornik
dukhoborcheskikh psalmov, stikhov i pesen (Grand Forks: U.S.C.C., 1978) and as
engraved on a stone monument that stands at the site of the former Sirotsky Dom
in the village of Gorelovka, Georgia. The psalm, orally transmitted over
the generations, references significant events in the history of the
Doukhobor people.
Interestingly, the name of the Doukhobor who inscribed the Efremovka monument is
partially preserved in the 19th century Russian texts. The partial name “B-iy”
may refer to any of several Russian men’s names (i.e. Barfoniy, Bonifatiy, etc.)
or it may reference the surname of the inscriber (i.e. Barovskiy,
Bazilevskiy, Bykovskiy, etc.). It is therefore impossible to ascertain the name
of the Doukhobor inscriber.
The sites where the Efremovka and Rodionovka monuments once stood are also
identified in the historic texts. Both Rodionov and Germogen note that the
monuments were left in the Doukhobor cemeteries in each village. Unfortunately,
however, neither cemetery exists today, nor is its location known.
While it is apparent that the Efremovka and Rodionovka monuments still existed
at the time Rodionov and Germogen wrote their texts in 1872 and 1887, their
subsequent fate is unknown. According to Alexander A. Chukhraenko, discoverer of
the Bogdanovka memorial, they are no longer found in these villages, and the
present inhabitants have no knowledge or memory of their existence.
It is possible that the Doukhobor memorials have not
survived the past century and a half. Perhaps they were destroyed during the
wars and revolution that ravaged the region in the twentieth century. Or perhaps the monuments were removed by local inhabitants and
reused as building materials. This is certainly known to have occurred with some
Tsarist-era monuments.
It is also possible that the stone memorials still survive,
but have been looted and plundered and now lay in private hands. Or perhaps they
fell over and now lay buried under several inches of soil. If this were
the case, then they might still await discovery, somewhere below the surface
of the villages.
Whatever their fate, the discovery of the existence
of the Efremovka and Rodionovka monuments highlights that the archeology of the
Molochnaya Doukhobors remains an area ripe for further attention.
For More Information
For more information on Doukhobor archaeological
sites on the Molochnaya, see the articles
Doukhobor Memorial Stone
from the Village of Bogdanovka,
The
Doukhobor Monument to Alexander I in Terpeniye
and
The
Mystery of Terpeniye's Buried Treasure
by Alexander A. Chukhraenko
and The
Cossack Cross of Spasskoye by Jonathan
J. Kalmakoff with Alexander A. Chukhraenko.
This article
was reproduced by permission in ISKRA No.2026 (Grand Forks: Union of
Spiritual Communities in Christ, January 1, 2010).
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