Naša Niva

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Naša Niva (Наша Ніва, Nasha Niva, lit. Our field) is one of the oldest Belarusian weekly newspaper founded in 1906 and re-established in 1991.

The current editor-in-chief is Andrej Skurko, who succeeded Andrej Dyńko.

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[edit] History

[edit] 1906-1915

The newspaper was founded in 1906 by members of the Belarusian Socialist Union (Hramada in Vilnia (modern Vilnius) that was a centre of the Belarusian national movement at that time.

"Naša Niva" was among the first newspapers in Belarusian language, it published news about Belarus and literary works by Belarusian authors. In 1915 the newspaper was closed down because of the World War I. During the Soviet rule "Naša Niva" was claimed to be “counter-revolutionary” and “capitalist” despite the fact that its founders and authors were mostly adherents of socialism.

[edit] Since 1991

In 1991 the newspaper was re-established in Vilnius by the editor-in-chief Siarhiej Dubaviec.

Under the presidency of Alexander Lukashenko the newspaper was subjected under state pressure and at one point, in the late 1990s there was an attempt to close down the newspaper, because of it using a version of Belarusian orthography that went against the version adopted by the state, which dates to the reform of 1933 that has been criticised as a from of Russification by some political groups, in any case Nasha Niva remains a paper that publishes exclusively in Belarusian language.

In October 2003, former Czech President Václav Havel granted the cash portion of the Hanno R. Ellenbogen Citizenship Award to "Nasha Niva" editor Andrey Dynko. The Hanno R. Ellenbogen Citizenship Award is given each year by the Prague Society for International Cooperation to an individual who has dedicated his or her life to public service with the stipulation that the financial portion of the award be passed to a gifted young person. "I pass this award to Mr. Dynko because we, who have benefited so much from international solidarity, must show solidarity ourselves," Havel said at the award ceremony in Prague. "'Nasha Niva' in Belarus is a symbol of independence on the one hand and an island of freedom on the other."

Since 2006 "Naša Niva" was expelled from the media subscription system of Belarus (controlled by the state monopolist "Belposhta") and is now distributed by enthusiasts.

In April 2006 the ideology administration of Minsk executive committee ordered "Naša Niva" to leave their office; so a newspaper without an office could be easily closed down by Information Ministry. The staff members sent letters of appeals to Lithuania to apply to UNESCO for including the newspaper into the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. But as of February 2007 "Naša Niva" has official office in Minsk and is printed in near 2500 circulation, most of which is distributed by mail.


[edit] External links