Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 18 – There are few
subjects that generate more dismissive laughter than the idea that the Cossacks
could ever form the basis for an independent state. Moscow has attacked the
idea especially in connection with the listing of Cossackia in the 1959
Congressional Resolution establishing Captive Nations Week.
But ever more Cossacks are taking
this idea more seriously. (For a
discussion of that, see this author’s “Cossackia: No Longer an Impossible
Dream?” Jamestown Eurasia Daily Monitor, February 21, 2019 at jamestown.org/program/cossackia-no-longer-an-impossible-dream/ and windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/06/cossackia-lives-and-will-be-free-dyomin.html.)
Now, in what may spark even more
interest, the Podolsk Memorial Museum on the Don Cossacks in the Struggle with
Bolshevism has published a 522-page book entitled Against the Red Band … featuring
the writings of three major émigré advocates of an independent Cossackia,
Yemelyan Kochetov, Yefim Getmanov and Petr Dzhevzinov.
Most of the materials in the book
come from sources that are bibliographic rarities, including mimeographed
publications long out of print or printed materials issued in such small print
runs that they are to be found in only a handful of libraries. Now they can be
read in full, and the advocates of an independent Cossackia can gain a hearing.
Kochetov is the least known, having written
and published little about his experiences and views until he compiled his memoirs
in 1949 while a DP in a camp near Oldenburg. They are now available online at old.elan-kazak.org/almanakh-3-2010-fail-pdf-tekstovaya-versiya/kochet.
Getmanov
is better known because he served as the Paris representative of the newspaper Kazachiy
Vestnik from 1940 to 1945 and then served as editor and publisher of Kazachye
Yedinstvo, which was produced on mimeograph in the 1950s and early 1960s (istorypedia.com/17/195/1614959.html).
But
Dzhevzinov is perhaps best known because, he published a unique memoir as a Kalmyk
Buddhist Cossack under the title The Don Kalmyk Cossacks in the Struggle
with Bolshevism 1917-1920 (in Russian, New Jersey, 1968) (elan-kazak.org/arxiv/dzhevzinov-petr-donskie-kalmyki-kazaki-v-borbe-s-bolshevizmom-v-1917-1920-gg-nyu-dzhersi-ssha-1968-g).
The new book collecting their writings
during emigration about aspirations for an independent Cossackia has been
welcomed by a remarkably sympathetic review prepared by Regnum’s Andrey
Martynov (regnum.ru/news/polit/2692369.html).
Among
Cossack emigres, he says, “the movement of independence-minded Cossacks enjoyed
popularity.” It was connected with people like Maj.Gen. Isaak Bykadorov (author
of History of the Cossacks (in Russian, Paris, 1930) and The Don Cossacks
in the Struggle for a Way to the Sea (in Russian, Paris, 1937), engineer
Vasily Glazkov (the author of the English-language History of the Cossacks
(New York, 1968), “and other no less bright figures.”
Moderates
among the independence-minded Cossacks, Martynov says, favored having Russia
become a federation with the Cossacks having broad autonomy. “The more radical
called for the independence of ‘Greater Cossackia,’” were against the
restoration of the monarchy and followed the socialist revolutionaries in their
economic programs.
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