Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 17 – The first of
what is projected to be a new comic book series in Kalmyk went on sale this
week, a series whose hero is a young Kalmyk who discovers in himself the force
of an ancient Oirot warrior and whose content in both Kalmyk and Russian
acquaints its readers with the mystical traditions of the Buddhist Kalmyks.
The authors of the comic book, the
first of its kind in Kalmyk, are two Elista artists, Ochir Tostayev and Oleg
Chudutov, who say they consulted historians and linguists to prepare it (riakalm.ru/news/daynews/3022-segodnya-v-prodazhu-postupil-pervyj-kalmytskij-komiks-syumsn-volya-sudby and nazaccent.ru/content/21329-pervyj-kalmyckij-komiks-postupil-v-prodazhu.html).
Officials in
Kalmykia are celebrating this event, but many Russian officials may rue this
day in the future. Comic books not only allow the discussion of alternative
futures and alternative pasts but help form the worldviews of the young who
read them. And Kalmyk history is full of
events that an Oirat warrior might find himself arrayed in conflicts with
Russia.
The name “Oirat” is Mongol and
refers to “the forest peoples” in the westernmost part of the Mongol Horde.
They settled on the western bank of the Volga, but their relations with Russia
were fraught with violence: Catherine
the Great tried to have them exterminated, and after they revolted in 1926,
1930, and 1942-43, Stalin deported them to Siberia and Central Asia.
Of particular interest in this
regard is the history of Kalmyk and Mongol efforts at rapprochement. The
Kalmyks were part of the pan-Mongol movement in the early 20th
century, and Mongol leaders tried to convince the Soviet government to allow
the Kalmyks to resettle in Mongolia at the time of the famine in the early
1920s.
The Soviet authorities banned the
teaching of Kalmyk after that nation was
deported in 1943. Since their return to the Volga region and the reestablishment
of their republic, the Kalmyks have tried to promote the revival of their
national language and traditions. The
new comic books are likely to help; and for that reason if no other, they are
no laughing matter.
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