Tag: Soviet Union

  • MoM 100: Jews and Mennonites in the Soviet Union 100 years ago

    MoM 100: Jews and Mennonites in the Soviet Union 100 years ago

    One thing participants in the Memories of Migration: Russlaender 100 Tour have been reminded during the trip is that the experiences facing their ancestors in the Soviet Union were not unique. Other groups also faced hardship and crisis there at the same time. This was a point underscored by Jonathan Dekel-Chen of The Hebrew University…

  • Odessa state archives

    Odessa state archives

    As the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991, staff at the state archives in Odessa, Ukraine, worked diligently to microfilm Russian Mennonite documents in its possession. Collected by Peter J. Braun during the turbulent years of the Russian Revolution and Civil War (1917-1920), and later confiscated by the Soviet state, the records languished in obscurity until…

  • UWinnipeg Fellowship to crack open KGB archives

    UWinnipeg Fellowship to crack open KGB archives

    In the 1930s, thousands of Mennonites disappeared in the Soviet Union without a trace. The KGB archives in Ukraine has thousands of files on these missing Mennonites, and a newly announced University of Winnipeg Fellowship wants to crack into these archives to uncover the stories of lost relatives, ancestors and much more. Through the Centre…

  • Filmmaker dedicated to telling the Mennonite story

    Filmmaker dedicated to telling the Mennonite story

    Using pre-digital equipment, Otto Klassen works on one of his more than 50 films that document the lives of Mennonites. (Photo courtesy of Ken Reddig) Otto Klassen dedicated many years of his life to making documentaries that tell Mennonite stories. A self-taught filmmaker, he produced a total of 84 films in his lifetime, most of…

  • Every name deserves to be remembered

    Every name deserves to be remembered

    On the evening of Oct. 29, 2017, I found myself in Lubyanka Square by happenstance. This square stands in front of the Lubyanka Building. The vibrant yellow facade, delightful rather than imposing, disarms those passing by. But the suffering planned and perpetrated within its walls cast a heavy shadow for those who know the history…