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Retracing Estonia's Russians: Mikhail Kurchinskii and Interwar Cultural Autonomy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

David J. Smith*
Affiliation:
Department of European Studies at the University of Bradford, U.K.

Extract

In exploring the history of the Russian minority in Estonia during 1918–1940, one is inevitably drawn to the figure of Professor Mikhail Anatolevich Kurchinskii (1876–1939). An academic and journalist, Kurchinskii was also an important political actor devoted to the quest for a satisfactory resolution of the nationality question in Estonia and Europe. It is with good reason that Kurchinskii has been called “the most important theoretician and practical advocate of cultural autonomy amongst the [interwar] Russian minority in Estonia.” From 1927 he also served as a leading member of the Congress of European Minorities (CEM), which became the main promoter of the cultural autonomy concept on the wider European stage. During the same period he took a deep interest in the work of the Pan-Europe movement and the quest for a durable settlement of European affairs following the traumas of World War I. Until very recently, however, Kurchinskii has remained a neglected figure among historians, even within the narrow field of Baltic studies. This neglect is symptomatic of the lack of attention devoted to the political history of the Russian minority more generally. As the first group to implement Estonia's celebrated 1925 law on cultural autonomy, the interwar German minority has already formed the object of a number of studies. By contrast, Kurchinskii's failure to realize the autonomy project means that he—and, indeed, the Russian minority as a whole—barely receives a mention in most histories of Estonia. Just as Kurchinskii's aspirations regarding cultural autonomy were never realized during his lifetime, so his vision of building a “New Europe” faded against the background of economic depression and a retreat into inward-looking national particularism during the 1930s. The tragic fate that befell central and eastern Europe after 1939 has in turn tended to obscure many of the ideas and positive achievements of the interwar minorities movement. This article uses Kurchinskii's career to illuminate issues relating to the sociopolitical development of the Russian minority between the wars. In particular it compares Kurchinskii's thinking on minority issues with that of his rival Aleksei Janson (1866–1940), a socialist politician and pedagogical expert who served as Russian National Secretary in the Estonian Ministry of Education from 1922 to 1927. Finally, by linking Kurchinskii's quest for cultural autonomy to his broader thinking on the “New Europe,” the article assesses the relevance of these ideas to contemporary debates on the nationality question.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1999 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

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References

Notes

1. Tat'iana Shor, “Problemy Kul'turnoi Avtonomii v Trudakh M.A. Kurchinskogo,” unpublished draft document (Tartu, 1998), p. 1. My thanks to Dr Shor for her kind permission to use this material. I am also extremely grateful to Professor Lyubov Kiseleva of the University of Tartu and Mr Aleksandr Dormidontov for their invaluable assistance in the preparation of this paper. Finally, I wish to thank Dr Rein Ruutsoo for providing me with certain key source materials.Google Scholar

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43. Ibid.Google Scholar

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48. Sitzungsbericht des Kongresses des Organisierten Nationalen Gruppen in den Staaten Europas, Genf, 29 bis 31. August 1928 (Vienna and Leipzig: Wilhelm Braumüller, 1928), pp. 4043.Google Scholar

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58. ERA, f.1108, n.8, a.196, p. 3.Google Scholar

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60. Letter from Janson to the head of the Prinarova branch of the Russian National Union, 14 February 1923, ERA, f.1108, n.8, a.190, p. 15.Google Scholar

61. This list incorporated the Russian National Union, the Russian Peasant Workers Party, URECS and the Union of Russian Teachers. ERA, f.1108, n.8, a.190, p. 19.Google Scholar

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63. “Waba Maa ob' Ukhod' A. Iansona,” Nasha Gazeta , 3 December 1927.Google Scholar

64. A. Egorov', “K' Ukhodu A.K. Iansona,” Nasha Gazeta , 1 December 1927.Google Scholar

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68. Garleff, op. cit ., p. 89.Google Scholar

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70. Shor, op. cit ., pp. 89.Google Scholar

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77. Professor Lyubov Kiseleva, interview with author, Tartu, May 1998.Google Scholar

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