Germans from Russia Heritage Collection
News
April, 1996 No. 5
Springtime and Easter Greetings to each of you.
Only a few more weeks until many of us experience our historic
tours of Germany and the Ukraine in June.
Arizona Gatherings
We appreciate the wonderful reception and impressive
attendance at the NDSU Libraries' outreach programs in Apache
Junction, Sun City, Scottsdale, and Mesa, Arizona. Joining me
at the Arizona events were John W. Beecher, Director of Libraries,
and Charlotte Cox, Director of Development. "The strong interest
people showed in our German from Russia Heritage Collection, as
well as in the Libraries' outreach activities was a revelation
to us, "said Beecher. "Given such a welcome in the Southwest,
we are sure to make plans to be back next year."
In Sun City on February 29, fifty persons attended
the gathering, including German-Russians born in the Kutschurgan
and Beresan German villages. At the Mesa Regal Resort on March
2, we expected about 40 persons. However close to 150 attended
the event! We also had memorable home gatherings at Apache Junction
(hosted by Betty and Chris Maier), Scottsdale (Leo and Delores
Sitter), and Redondo Beach, CA (Margaret and Bob Freeman).
According to Margaret Freeman, Coordinator of Glückstal
Colonies Research Association, "The NDSU Libraries events in Arizona
provided quality contacts and the pleasure of seeing many of our
relatives in such pleasant surroundings. Bob and I were impressed
with how NDSU is reaching out to North Dakotans who ordinarily
have no contact with the university."
The Mesa program featured an inspiring presentation
of her escape from Russia by Elvera Reuer, author of the book,
The Last Bridge. Elvera also presented her hand-made dolls,
"Depression Babies," as gifts for us to take to Odessa in June
for the Ukrainian children. To order a copy of The Last Bridge,
contact Elvera Reuer, 1872 West Keating, Mesa, AZ 85202 (602-839-9735).
Elvera presented other beautiful dolls for future
exhibitions to the Germans from Russia Heritage Collection. Elvera
plans to prepare special historic wedding dolls detailing the
dress worn by our German-Russian people in the former Black Sea
and Bessarabian German villages. We will use the wedding dolls
with our 1998 traveling exhibition, Traditions of German-Russian
Weddings: From the Steppes of Bessarabia and Ukraine to the Prairies
of the Dakotas.
Close to 3,000 people attended the North Dakota
Picnic on Sunday, March 3, with at least 300 visiting our NDSU
Libraries display tables. There were many people who expressed
an interest in future tours to Odessa and in other forthcoming
Germans from Russia activities. The 1997 North Dakota Picnic will
be on Sunday, March 2. Join us next year!
Visit my personal homepage on the World Wide Web
(http://library.ndsu.edu/gerrus/gr.html)
to view color photographs of the NDSU Libraries outreach events
in Arizona.
The Kempf Family Exhibit Travels to Beulah
The NDSU Libraries' current traveling exhibit,
The Kempf Family: Germans from Russia Weavers on the Dakota Prairies,
is on display at the City Hall in Beulah, ND, until May 15.
After Beulah, the exhibit travels to the McIntosh
County Museum in Ashley, from June 2 to August 2, with the grand
opening reception and program on Sunday, June 2 at 1:30 pm.; then
to the Southwest State Bank in Oakes, from August 4 to September
15 with the grand opening reception and program on Sunday, August
4 at 1:30 pm; and then to the Public Library in Harvey, from October
6 to December 31, 1996 with the grand opening reception and program
on Sunday, October 6 at 1:30 pm.
The 1996 spring edition of North Dakota Horizons
features a color photo article about the Kempf exhibit and the
heritage of the Germans from Russia. For a copy of this special
edition, send $6, payable to the Germans from Russia Heritage
Collection, NDSU Libraries, P.O. Box 5599, Fargo, ND 58105-5599.
The Church in the Siberian Homeland
We are pleased to announce the publication,The
Church and the Russian Germans in the Siberian Homeland Today:
A Personal Interview with His Excellency, The Most Rev. Joseph
Werth, Bishop of Siberia, by Eric J. Schmaltz, 1996. The
publication is available for purchase for $6 plus $2 postage payable
to Germans from Russia Heritage Collection. The interview will
be published in English, German, and Russian.
Boris Moser Visits North Dakota from 6-13 April
Boris Moser of Tiraspol, Moldova, arrives in Fargo
on April 6, the day of his 18th birthday. He is a high school
exchange student living in northern California. Boris returns
to Tiraspol in June. He wishes to learn more about North Dakota's
German-Russian community. His brother, Sergei, will be an English
translator in Odessa for the June tours. Boris spoke to the German-Russian
chapter meetings in California. My thanks to Doris Dickenson of
Guerneville,CA, for introducing Boris to our German-Russian people.
Tour group members will meet Waldemar and Natalia Moser, Boris'
parents, when they visit Odessa during the tours. Waldemar, a
banker is of Crimean German ancestry. Natalia is well known for
her professional embroidery work. Her Bessarabian and Moldovan
embroidery has been purchased for future exhibits and for the
archives of the Germans from Russia Heritage Collection.
Paul Krüger, Formerly of Siberia, Visits North
Dakota
Paul Krüger, who immigrated to Siegen, Germany,
from a village near Omsk, Siberia, in 1994, will visit his relatives
in Tennessee, Arizona, California and North Dakota this spring.
Paul and Anna Krüger will visit Fargo, Fessenden, and Harvey,
ND, on May 2-7.
Although most of the Krügers of Volhynian German
ancestry immigrated to the Fessenden area in the 1910s, Paul's
father decided to stay in Russia. Paul's uncle Otto Krueger became
a U.S. Congressman from North Dakota from 1951-1955. Ironically,
while his Uncle Otto was serving in the U.S. Congress, Paul's
father was serving in a slave labor camp in Siberia. In 1991,
Paul read in Neues Leben, the German newspaper published
in Moscow, an article I had written about the Germans from Russia.
He wrote to me seeking his Krueger relatives on the Dakota prairies.
In June, 1994, at the Bundestreffen, we met Paul
Krüger who presented a heart-rending account of his life at the
Amerika Haus für die Schwarzmeerdeutschen. Now a resident
of Germany, Paul will join us again at the Bundestreffen on June
22, 1996, in Stuttgart. I look forward to hosting the Krügers
when they visit NDSU, Fargo, and the homestead near Fessenden.
Paul, who was a teacher in Siberia, is writing his autobiography,
which we plan to publish for our North American readers.
New German American Book Features German-Russians
The outstanding new book, The German American
Family Album, by award-winning authors Dorothy and Thomas
Hoobler, includes many photographs and oral interviews of the
Germans from Russia community. Published by Oxford University
Press, the book is the ninth in a series of volumes on ethnic
cultures in America.
In a March 3, 1996 letter Dorothy Hoobler writes,
"We both felt that the reading and pictures of the Germans from
Russia section were among the best in the book. Before we started
this series, I knew little about Germans from Russia as part of
America's melting pot. But I found both the achievements and hardships
of the Germans from Russia pioneers particularly appealing. We
thank you, in addition, for your kind help while we were working
on the book. Tom and I look forward to meeting you in person in
New York City this summer. I felt as if I made a new friend in
North Dakota while doing this book."
I will meet the Hooblers at the American Library
Association Conference in New York upon returning from Frankfurt
on July 5. The Hooblers will autograph their new book at the ALA
Convention. To order the book, send $20 plus $3 postage, payable
to the Germans from Russia Heritage Collection, NDSU Libraries,
P.O. Box 5599, Fargo, ND 58105-5599.
New York Times Features North Dakotans with
German Roots
James Brooke at the Denver office of the New
York Times wrote an interesting article titled, "Spanish Is
the 2d Language of Choice In North Dakota, With German Roots:
Preference Reflects Trend Among Students Elsewhere in U.S." (March
2, 1996, page 6). A forthcoming article in the New York
Times will feature the Germans from Russia Discussion Group
on the electronic mail Internet. Leading German-Russian
genealogists were interviewed. The article focuses on family
research via electronic mail and the World Wide Web as well as
on the reunification of families.
Oral History Interview Project
Joyce Reinhardt Larson, a native of Zap, ND, living
in Fargo, and Ann Braaten, Curator of the Emily P. Reynolds Costume
Collection at NDSU, will join me in interviewing the sisters of
German-Russian heritage at the Convent of St. Francis, Hankinson,
ND, on April 10. Joyce has been a volunteer interviewer and transcriber
since 1995. Betty and Chris Maier of Linton, ND, and Apache Junction,
AZ, joined us as interviewers in August. They have completed interviews
in Linton, Bismarck, and Apache Junction. Leo J. Neifer of Roscoe,
SD, becomes a volunteer interviewer in April. We are also recruiting
interviewers in Bakersfield, CA, but we need to identify many
more. Detailed questions are already prepared, and tape recorders
and cassette tapes are supplied, so contact me if you are interested.
Historic German-Russian Photographs
We need to locate black and white photographs of
German-Russian experiences for the photo archives of the Germans
from Russia Heritage Collection and for traveling exhibit. We
would like to borrow photos to prepare negatives of weddings,
homemaking, agriculture, military, and village scenes of the South
Russian German villages and those taken in North America. We are
especially interested in wedding photographs for the forthcoming
exhibit.
1997 Journey to the Homeland Tours
On March 26-27, I traveled to Chicago to deliver
passports and visas for the NDSU Libraries-sponsored June tours,
Journey to the Homeland: Germany and Ukraine. I met with Irena
Klisz of Northwestern Travel Bureau, Chicago who has 25 years
leading tours to Russia and Ukraine. We have tentatively established
the dates for the two 1997 tours for the following: May 14-31,
1997 and late August or September, 1997 including seven days in
Odessa and the former German villages, three days in St. Petersburg,
Russia and three days in Kiev, Ukraine. There may also be a stop
in Germany. There continues to be an impressive response from
the German-Russian community wishing to visit the homeland of
their ancestors. To be placed on the wait-list for future tours
contact Journey to the Homeland Tours, Germans from Russia
Heritage Collection, NDSU Libraries, P.O. Box 5599, Fargo, ND
58105-5599.
School Supplies Needed for Ukrainian Children
When I traveled in December to Odessa and the former
German villages in southern Ukraine, I saw shoratage of basic
everyday amenities. I shall never forget the moment in the village
school of Novosamarka (formerly Sofiental) when I realized that
I did not have enough pencils for all the children. A second grade
student broke her pencil in half so her classmate could also have
part of a pencil. She later asked me if I could bring her another
pencil when I returned in June, so she "could have an eraser too".
In June 1996, tour group members of the Journey to the Homeland:
Germany and Ukraine Tours, will bring suitcases full of school
supplies for the children. The project is called "Caring
Hearts and Sharing Gifts: For Ukrainian School Children".
Supplies most needed include maps, tablets, pencils, pens, markers,
crayons, chalk, erasers, tape, scissors, and water color sets.
Anyone interested in donating supplies (or in making a cash donation)
should contact me at 701-231-8416; or send donations to Helping
the Ukrainian Children, c/o Michael M. Miller, NDSU Libraries,
P.O. Box 5599, Fargo, ND 58105-5599.
Click on a photo to view a larger image!
 |
The village school of Novosmarka, Ukraine December, 1995
(former German village of Sofiental)
|
NDSU Libraries Events in Arizona February 29,
March 2-3, 1996
 |
Persons attending the 1996 North Dakota Picnic on March
3 in Mesa visit the NDSU Libraries tables. |
 |
Margaret Freeman, Redondo Beach CA, speaks at NDSU Libraries
event in Sun City AZ on February 29. |
 |
Many German-Russians attend gathering in Sun City. |
 |
Elvera Reuer, Mesa AZ, author of the, The Last Bridge,
speaks at Germans from Russia event at Mesa Regal Resort
on March 2. |
Newsletter prepared by Michael M. Miller
Design by Center for Writers, NDSU
North Dakota State University Libraries, Fargo
Upcoming 1996 and 1997 Dates for Germans from
Russia Events Sponsored by the NDSU Libraries
NDSU Libraries traveling exhibit The Kempf Family:
Germans from Russia Weavers on the Dakota Prairies
March 31 - May 15, 1996, City Hall, Beulah, ND
June 2 - August 2, 1996, McIntosh County Museum, Ashley, ND
August 4 - September 15, First Southwest Bank, Oakes, ND
October 6 - December 31, 1996 - Public Library, Harvey, ND
May 13 - September 1, 1997 - Bismarck State College Library
Summer, 1998 - National Buffalo Museum, Jamestown, ND
March 2, 1997, 10 am - 3 pm, North Dakota Picnic, Pioneer Park,
Mesa, AZ
June 8 - 24, 1996, Tour Group I, NDSU Libraries-sponsored
tour, Journey to the Homeland: Germany and Ukraine
June 17 - July 2, 1996, Tour Group II, NDSU Libraries-sponsored
tour, Journey to the Homeland: Germany and Ukraine
June 22, 1996, Bundestreffen, Stuttgart, Germany
(large German-Russian gathering)
NDSU Libraries-sponsored program, "America House
for the Black Sea Germans"
June 12 - 16, 1996 American Historical Society
of Germans from Russia Convention, Bloomington, MN; presentation
by Jage Gage, Exhibits Curator, on the textiles and clothing of
the German-Russians
July 18 - 21, 1996, Germans from Russia Heritage
Society Convention, Grand Forks, ND; panel discussion on July
18 by June tour group members of experiences in Germany and Ukraine;
presentation by Jay Gage on Germans from Russia textiles and clothing
May 14 - 31, 1997, Tour I, Journey to the Homeland
Tour
Fall, 1997, Tour II, Journey to the Homeland
Tour
For further information, contact:
Michael M. Miller
Germans from Russia Heritage Collection
North Dakota Institute for Regional Studies
PO Box 5599
North Dakota State University Libraries
Fargo ND 58105-5599
Fax: 701-231-7138
Tel.: 701-231-8416
E-mail: Michael.Miller@ndsu.edu