8.
Conclusion
The sun has set on the Subbotniki. They exist no more as an organized
religion in any part of the world as far as I can tell(1).
However, the
fact that they did exist is important to note and document. This is
especially important to those, like me, who are descendants of
Subbotniki.
These people followed a faith that was in-between the worlds of their
Molokan heritage and that of the ethnic Jews that they chose to
emulate. In adopting more fundamental, Old Testament practices such as
the laws laid down by Moses and the Saturday Sabbath, they felt they
were getting closer to God. However, they ended up being ostracized by
their neighbors from both sides. In addition to enduring the
persecution of non-believers by the Russian Orthodox Church and
the Tsarist government, they were isolated from others, including
Molokans and Russian Jews, who were enduring the same fate. Still, they
pursued their beliefs for a long time. However, lacking sufficient
critical mass, the Subbotniki were not able to sustain their identity
and religion after leaving the Motherland. Upon reaching new shores,
both America and Israel, they soon blended into the mainstream society
in their new homelands.
Are there descendants of Subbotniki immigrants who settled in other
parts of the United States? If so, who are they? I hope to find the
answer to this question someday. I would appreciate hearing from any
reader who has corrections or additional information about the
Subbotniki past and present.
- Author’s Note — April 2005: I
reached this conclusion
while writing this paper in 2000. As indicated in Additional Sources in
the Bibliography and in other citations listed on the new
Subbotniki.org web site, other researchers have discovered and
documented their visits to small Subbotniki villages in the Azerbaijan
and Armenia in the early part of the 21st Century.
Bibliography
- Louis Adamic, A Nation of Nations (New
York:
Harper &
Brothers, 1944) pp. 152-3 [Back to citation.]
- S M Dubnow, History of the Jews in Russia
and
Poland, Vol. 1,
translated by I. Friedlaender (Philadelphia, PA: Jewish Publication
Soc. of America, 1916) pp. 19-29, 36-7, 246-254, 401-3 [Back
to citation.]
- Robin Milner-Gulland and Nikolai Dejevsky, Cultural
Atlas of
Russia and the Soviet Union (New York, NY: 1991 – ISBN:
0-8160-2207-0)
43-4 [Back to citation.]
- Kevin A, Brook, Jews of Khazaria
(Northvale,
NJ: Jason Aronson,
Inc., 1999 – ISBN: 0-7657-6032-0 ) 260
Also see website: http://www.khazaria.com
[Back to citation.]
- Pauline V. Young, Pilgrims of Russian-Town
(Chicago, IL:
University of Chicago Press, 1932 – LC 66-27375) 22, 64-5, 229-30 [Back
to citation.]
- James H. Billington, The Icon and the Axe:
An
interpretive
History of Russian Culture (New York, NY: Vintage Books, 1970 – LC:
66-18687) pp. 288-9 [Back to citation.]
- Raphael and Jennifer Patai, The Myth of the
Jewish Race
(Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 1989 – ISBN: 0-8143-1948-3)
pp. 88-90 [Back to citation.]
- Masha Greenbaum, The Jews of Lithuania
(Jerusalem: Gefen
Publishing House, 1995 – ISBN: 965-229-132-3) pp. 171-2 [Back
to citation.]
- A. I. Kilbanov, History of Religious
Sectarianism in Russia
(1860s -1917), translated by Ethel and edited by Stephen Dunn
(Elmsford, NY: Pergamon Press, 1982 – ISBN: 0-08--26794-7) pp. 13,
45-6,
180, 182, 207, 398, 404 [Back to citation.]
- S. Stepaniak, The Russian Peasantry: their
agrarian condition,
social life, and religion (London: G. Routledge & Sons, 1905 -
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- As cited in Allen H. Godbey, The Lost
Tribes: a
Myth (New York,
NY: KATV Publishing, 1974 – LC 72-10300) pp. 302-3 [Back
to citation.]
- Bernard Marinbach, Galveston: Ellis Island
of
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Holocaust in France
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Additional
Resources
- Nicholas B Breyfogle, Heretics
and Colonizers: Religious
Dissent and Russian Colonization of Transcaucasia, 1830 – 1890
(PhD
dissertation in history) (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania,
1998)
- V I Kozlov, Russkie
starozhily Zakavkaz’ia Molokane i Dukhobortsy
(Moscow, Russia: Institut Etnologii i Antropologii, 1995)
- Yo’av Karny, Highlanders:
A Journey to the
Caucasus in
Quest of Memory (New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000
–
ISBN:
0-374-22602-4) pp. 302-47
- V A Dymshits, Expedition
to Azerbaijan in June 1997
(St.
Petersburg. Russia: Petersburg Judaica Research Center)
- Alexandr L’vov, Gery
and Subbotniks – Talmudists and Karaimy
(St. Petersburg. Russia Petersburg: European University at St.
Petersburg, Center for Jewish Studies
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