There are five publications in issue 12, II-2025 of "Journal of Ethnic Microhistory". 1. Dipl.-Hist. Alex Dreger discusses in his article "Austro-Hungarian and German Newspapers about the Alexander Kuprin's Opinion on the Russian Army and the Revolution" the publication "The Russian Army and the Revolution" ("Die russische Armee und die Revolution") released in "Dortmund Daily" (Dortmunder Tageblatt) on 24 September 1906. The article is written in English and is supplemented by the original newspaper text in German. 2. Prof. Dr. Volodymyr Saviovskyi narrates about the unique traditional procedure of building the Ukrainian rural houses in the 1950s. The terminology is given in the Polesian dialect of Ukrainian. The author describes a somewhat forgotten folk tradition of toloka - mutual aid. Toloka ended with a communal feast in the open air. The article is preceded by an English abstract. 3. The article "Scientific and Pedagogical Foundations of Teaching Eternal National Values" written by Kazakh co authors is devoted to the educational importance of the state programme "Mangilik El". They are of the opinion that the roots of the achievements and successes of the multinational and multi-religious Kazakhstan lie in traditional values. The article is written in Kazakh language and preceded by an English abstract. 4. Villa Mengden - that is part of the Russian State Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg - is inextricably connected with the history of a Westphalian, later also German-Baltic and Russian, noble family. In March 1881, the Mengden Manor came into focus of police attention. Following the assassination of Russian Emperor Alexander II on March 1 (13), 1881, information emerged about an assassination attempt on the emperor that had been in preparation since the end of 1880. At the beginning of December 1880, the terrorists rented a cheese shop in the basement of the house. At the end of February 1881, a gallery was dug beneath the street, along which the emperor often passed, to store dynamite. This event was discussed extensively in the press, and a short report on the subject also appeared in the "Dortmunder Zeitung" on March 17, 1881. 5. The patriarch of the Russia-German movement Hugo Wormsbecher dwells in one of his last articles on the national policy of modern Russian government. He is of the opinion that multinational Russia lacks a national policy, "its goals and objectives are unclear and incomprehensible."
Ukrainian Prof. Dr. Volodymyr Saviovskyi teaches at Technical University of Dortmund.
Kulyan Zhagiparovna Ibrayeva
Academician, Doctor of Pedagogical Science, Professor Kulyan Zhagiparovna Ibrayeva works and teaches at Vocational Education Department of S. Seifullin Kazakh Agro Technical Research University of Kazakhstan Academy of Pedagogical Sciences in Astana, Kazakhstan.
Ileskan Dr. Smanov
Doctor of Pedagogical Sciences, Professor Ileskan Smanov teaches at Department of Psychology / Faculty of History and Pedagogy of Zhanibekov South Kazakhstan Pedagogical University in Shymkent, Republic of Kazakhstan.
Gulnar Islamkyzy Dr. Akhilbaeva
Gulnar Islamkyzy Akhilbaeva, Ph.D. teaches at Zhanibekov South Kazakhstan Pedagogical University in Shymkent, Republic of Kazakhstan.
Asem Spabekova
Asem Spabekova is student of group 1101-12 at Zhanibekov South Kazakhstan Pedagogical University in Shymkent, Republic of Kazakhstan.
Hugo Wormsbecher
Hugo (Gustavovich) Wormsbecher was born in 1938 in the Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of the Volga Germans. In 1941, he was exiled to Siberia, where he grew up. He worked as a turner, electrician, in a topographical expedition in the semi-deserts of Kazakhstan and in the Alatau Mountains, as a teacher, then - as a staff of the editorial boards of the newspapers "Freundschaft" (Friendship) in Zelinograd (today Nur-Sultan) and "Neues Leben" (New Life) in Moskau. He was the author of several books, novels, short stories, screenplays and numerous publications on history, culture, literature, current problems of the Russia-Germans. Hugo Wormsbecher had been a member of the USSR's Association of Journalists since 1969 and a member of the Writers' Association of the USSR since 1988. He had been in the midst of the movement of the Russia-Germans for their rehabilitation since 1963. Hugo Wormsbecher participated in the first two Russia-German delegations to Moscow in 1965. Since 1989, he had been fully integrated into the movement of the Russia-Germans: he was one of the founders of the society 'Wiedergeburt' (Rebirth), of the International Association of the Russia-Germans, and of the Federal Cultural Autonomy of the Russia-Germans. Hugo Wormsbecher died on 20 November 2024 in Moscow.
Walther Dr. Friesen (Hrsg.)
Dr. Walther Friesen is a specialist in Eastern and Oriental Studies. He lives in Germany.
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