Ryurik Lonin

Rjurik Petrovič Lonin
Born (1930-09-22)22 September 1930
Kaskesruchey, Republic of Karelia, Soviet Union
Died 17 July 2009(2009-07-17) (aged 78)
Shyoltozero, Republic of Karelia, Russia
Occupation toolmaker, museum worker
Nationality Veps
Genre Folklore, Local history
Spouse Anna Petrovna Lonina

Rjurik Petrovič Lonin — this is the Veps spelling of his name — (Russian: Рю́рик Петро́вич Ло́нин; 22 September 1930, Kaskez’ village (Russian: Каскезруче́й) in the present Prionezhskiĭ raĭon, Karelian ASSR, Soviet Union – 17 July 2009, Šoutar’v, Prionezhskiĭ raĭon, Republic of Karelia, Russia)[1] was a Veps student of the local lore and collector of Veps folklore, founder of The Rjurik Lonin Veps Ethnographic Museum in Šoutar’v (Shyoltozero), and an author in the Veps and Russian languages. He has been characterised as the most important Veps person ever to have lived and the best known Veps person of his time.[2]

Biography

Rjurik Lonin was born in the village of Kaskez’ on Lake Onega as the first child from the second marriage of Pjotr Lonin (Russian: Пётр Ло́нин) (b. ca. 1888). His mother was Fjokla Lonina (née Ryabčikova) from Ogerišt, Vehkoi (Russian: Вехруче́й) from the same area.[3]

According to Lonin himself, he was named after Prince Rurik of Novgorod. His father believed that Prince Rurik had been Veps by ethnicity.[4]

Lonin began school in Kaskez’ in the late 1930s. In 1941, when he was 11 years old, the Finnish Army occupied his home area in the Continuation War. He then continued in the Finnish school established by the occupiers. Lonin has said that only two persons from his home village went to evacuation further in the Soviet Union. They were the head of the local kolkhoz, and the teacher Maria Ivanovna Pepšina (b. 1915). They were the only persons in the village who were members of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. After the Finns retreated, he continued at school with the pre-war teacher. More than half a century later Lonin wrote a book about his war time experiences entitled Detstvo, opalyonnoye voĭnoĭ (‘A Childhood Scorched by War’). It which was published in 2004.

When Lonin was 16 years old, he moved to Petrozavodsk and studied in a vocational school, and from 1948 on he worked as a toolsmith and farm machinery repairman at a garage.

While living in the city, Lonin began to write poetry in Veps, and after various episodes he was asked to pay a visit to the Soviet Academy of Sciences, in its Karelian branch, at the Department of Languages, Literature and History (YALI), where Nikolai Bogdanov, researcher of the Veps language, urged him to begin to collect Veps folklore instead of writing poetry, which Lonin then began in 1956. He was no stranger to this task, having begun to collect Russian folk songs in his home village during the Finnish occupation. He now became an assistant to YALI, and he was given a letter of recommendation from the Academy of Sciences. Some items collected by Lonin were published in 1969 in the book Obrazcy vepsskoĭ reči (‘Samples of the Veps Language’). In the foreword of the book Lonin is described as “a resident of the Šoutar’v village, who is an enthusiastic collector of Veps folklore.[5]

In 1958, while still living the Petrozavodsk, Lonin went to a concert held in the Sulazhgora neighbourhood. When the choir sang a Veps number, “Vepsän ma om randanröunal” (‘The Veps Land Lies Along the Shore’), he was overcome by homesickness and decided to move to the village of Šoutar’v, where his parents lived at the time. He found a job as a toolmaker at the village sovkhoz.[6]

Founding of the Šoutar’v (Shyoltozero) Museum

In 1963, Lonin made his first folkore collecting trip outside of Karelia, to the Veps villages of the Lodeĭnopol’skiĭ raĭon in the Leningrad Oblast’.[7] In 1964, on a similar trip, the idea occurred to him that he should try to found a Veps ethnographic museum in his home village of Šoutar’v. He repeatedly presented applications to this effect to the local village soviet, and finally in 1967, in honour of the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Soviet State, he was given two rooms from the village library for his museum. The opening was held on 28 October, a week before the anniversary of the Russian Revolution.[8] In 1980 the museum became part of the Karelian Regional Museum, and in 1982 it was given new premises in the so-called Mel’kin House at Mel’kamättaz (‘Mel’kin’s Hill’) in Šoutar’v. It is the only museum in Russia dedicated to the presentation of Veps culture.

Lonin remained a scientific employee of the museum until 2001, and even later he worked there temporarily, when a substitute was needed, or for example, when the museum fence needed repair. His successor as the head of the museum is Ms. Natal’ya Ankhimova, originally from Ogerišt, Vehkoi.

In May 2010, the name of the museum was changed to The Rjurik Lonin Veps Ethnographic Museum in Šoutar’v (Shyoltozero) (Russian: Шeлтозерский вепсский этнографический музей имени Р. Лонина).[9]

Efforts to Revive the Veps Culture

Since the 1980s Lonin participated in the revival efforts of the Veps language and culture. He worked as a Veps language teacher at the Šoutar’v school in 1987–89, he translated the booklet Iisusan elo (‘The Life of Jesus’) and the Gospel of Mark, and although neither was printed, this marked the beginning of Bible translation in the Veps language. Lonin was later a part of group than commented upon the texts produced by Bible translator Nina Zaĭceva.

Lonin was a long-time member of the Veps National Choir in Šoutar’v (1957–2001), and he even wrote a song about a twirling stick that the choir has regularly performed.

Lonin participated in the third Finno-Ugrian World Congress in Helsinki in December 2000, and he also participated in the First Veps Authors’ World Conference in Kuhmo, Finland, in the autumn of 2002.

Personal life

Rjurik Lonin’s wife Anna Lonina (b. 1937, Mecantaga) is also an accomplished poet in the Veps language. One of her works is entitled Mecantahgižed (‘The People of Mecantaga’).

Honours and Decorations

During his life, Lonin was awarded the title of Hero of Socialist Labour (1970) and the Medal "Veteran of Labour" (1987). He was one of the winners of the All-Union Amateur Artists’ Festival (1985) as well as in the Second All-Union Popular Culture Festival (1987). He was given the title of Distinguished Cultural Worker of the Karelian Republic in 1992, a medal and a diploma named after T. G Ryabinin for Enlightenment Work in the Russian North (1995) and an award from the Open Society Institute of George Soros for His Devoted Work.[10][11]

Works by Rjurik Lonin

Lonin’s articles on the history of the Šoutar’v museum published in Finnish

Other writings by Lonin

References

  1. "GTRK: Ушёл из жизни защитник вепсской культуры" (in Russian). 2009-07-17. Retrieved 2011-01-31.
  2. "Karjalan sanomat" (in Finnish). 2009-07-17. Retrieved 2011-01-31.
  3. Rjurik Lonin: “Vepsän vainioilla”, Punalippu 1/1982, p. 108.
  4. Rjurik Lonin: “Kiinnostukseni taustat”. Punalippu 2/1989, p. 128.
  5. Zaiceva, Maria & Mullonen, Maria (1969). Obrazcy vepsskoĭ reči, (‘Samples of the Veps Language’). Leningrad: Nauka. p. 4.
  6. Punalippu 1/1982, p. 108.
  7. Punalippu 1/1982, p. 109.
  8. Punalippu 2/1982, p. 118–121.
  9. Шeлтозерский вепсский этнографический музей имени Р. Лонина
  10. Kareliya: enciklopediya. Tom 2. Petrozavodsk: Petropress. 2009. p. 175. ISBN 978-5-8430-0125-4.
  11. Rjurik Lonin — Veps Cultural Society homepages
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