A Mennonite Family in Tsarist Russia and the Soviet Union, 1789-1923

A Mennonite Family in Tsarist Russia and the Soviet Union, 1789-1923

Author
David G. Rempel, Cornelia Rempel Carlson
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Language
English
Year
2003
Page
408
ISBN
0802036392,9780802036391
File Type
pdf
File Size
19.5 MiB

From the Inside Flap


'I know of no narrative that chronicles the Russian Mennonite experience so extensively and so effectively. The story of a small, foreign minority unfolds amid the sometimes mundane and sometimes dramatic life of a single family. Aspects of the personal and experiential are reconstructed within the context of the often tumultuous history of nineteenth and early twentieth century Russia. David G. Rempel is always the historian and always the storyteller. What a fascinating, insightful saga!'
'A Mennonite Family is a remarkable book. A balanced combination of scholarly research and family reminiscence, the book opens up new vistas on one of Russia's most important yet neglected religious minorities, the Low-German speaking Mennonite colony of the Dnieper River region of the southern Ukraine. The main author, David Rempel, was a talented historian with a mission in life: to use his own multi-generational family story to recreate the social and cultural history of the larger ethno-religious group to which he belonged. With the posthumous assistance of his daughter, Cornelia Rempel Carson, who added some sections of her own to the manuscript and whose superb editing of the long and unwieldy original was truly a labor of love, Rempel succeeded admirably in fulfilling his life's dream. He has unearthed an amazing array of sources, mainly in German and some in Russian, and, drawing on his own memories and family papers for the more recent period (roughly the 1890s to 1923, the year of his emigration to Canada), Rempel and his daughter have woven them into a compelling narrative that is both readable and enlightening. The ethnography is as interesting as the political history, but most gripping of all is the account of the terrible ordeals faced by the colony during Russia's years of bloody civil war and famine (1918-23), as largely unpolitical and often pacifist Mennonites were drawn into the vortex of war, revolution and counterrevolution. Written with restraint and without special pleading, this wonderful book deserves a large and varied audience.'


About the Author


The late David G. Rempel received his Ph.D. in history from Stanford University. He was professor of history at the College of San Mateo in California, from 1934 until his retirement in 1964.


Cornelia Rempel Carlson, daughter of David G. Rempel, edited the manuscript for publication.

show more...

How to Download?!!!

Just click on START button on Telegram Bot

Free Download Book