Kazym rebellion

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Kazym rebellion refers to a revolt by the Khanty people of western Siberia against collectivisation policies of the Soviet government in 1933. The revolt is named after the small town of Kazym in the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug.

In the 1930’s, the new town of Kazym was established by the government as a "cultural base". In theory, cultural bases were meant to entice the Khanty into village life with the benefits of schools, hospitals, stores and other communal conveniences. This effort to collectivise native peoples into manageable communities did see a great many Khanty abandoning their forest homes. Still others were relocated forcibly during the Stalin years. Additionally, compulsory attendance in boarding schools located in towns such as Kazym meant that Khanty children were removed from traditional homes and, for many years, were forbidden to speak their native tongue or follow their cultural beliefs.

This process went alongside the abduction and execution of traditional leaders who were labelled "kulaks" by the state. Eventually there was a revolt in 1933 by many Khanty with support from the Forest Nenets called the Kazym rebellion. The revolt was centred on the town of Kazym and within several weeks was crushed by the Red Army who, it is reported, slaughtered dozens of villagers and burned their homes. The more distant rebellious Khanty villages were bombed by the air force. This was the last known conflict with Russia by any of the Siberian tribes.

After that anyone who took part in the Bear Funeral Rites or other celebrations of Khanty culture was subject to 10 years imprisonment. Bear hunting was forbidden and anything connected with Khant culture, such as sacred ground, pagan shrines or burial grounds were destroyed.

These laws were only relaxed during the 1980's as part of the glasnost policies of Mikhail Gorbachev.

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