Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 16 – Sholban Kara-ool,
head of Tuva, said on the eve of his republic’s national day which was marked yesterday,
that the independent Tuvan Peoples Republic that existed between 1920 and 1944
remains despite its brevity in “the 1000-year history of Tuva important to
Tuvans now.
The earlier republic, which like
Mongolia was a pre-war satellite of the USSR, is very much present “in our
lives,” the republic chief added, where it figures “in state symbols, in the administrative-territorial
divisions of the republics, in the names” of places and institutions” and in “monuments
of history and culture” (tuva.asia/news/tuva/6458-den-resp.html).
Consequently, “today it is important
to preserve a grateful memory for all those who contributed part of their hearts
and their labor to the flowering of their native kray [at that time] and not to
forget the lessons of history,” including “inter-ethnic accord” and respect for
representatives of other nations living on the territory of Tuva.
Tuva, one of the 83 federal subjects
of the Russian Federation, seldom attracts much attention beyond its pre-1940
stamps and Ralph Leyton’s 1991 book “Tuva or Bust” about American physicist
Richard Feynman’s interest in and ultimately unsuccessful attempt to travel to
a Buddhist republic which identifies itself as “the center of Asia.”
But it is in fact a fascinating
place, and this latest statement by its head Sholban Kara-ool only adds to that
fascination because few republics within the Russian Federation have a
relatively recent pre-Russian existence and even fewer have leaders who seem
interested in cultivating memories of such independence.
Tuva or Tannu-Tuva came into
existence as a separate and distinct state in 1920 when Bolshevik forces
occupied the region and allowed local followers to form a republic. Its
quasi-independent status was confirmed by a 1926 treaty between Kyyl and
Moscow, but from the beginning, Tuva was run by the Soviets and by graduates of
Moscow’s Communist University of Toilers of the East (KUTV).
Most Tuvans at that time were nomads
and followed a mix of Buddhism and shamanism. The Soviets tried to destroy
both, albeit with mixed success. On June 25, 1941, Kyzyl declared war on
Germany after Hitler invaded the USSR, and on November 1944, at the end of
World War II and after repeated requests by the Tuvin authorities, was annexed
to the USSR.
One of the reasons that this past
does not seem so distant to Tuvans, perhaps, is that the communist leader of
Tuva (himself a graduate of KUTV), Salchak Toka, served as general secretary of
the Tuvan People’s Revolutionary Party until it became an obkom of the CPSU,
from 1932 to 1973, well within living memory.
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