{"id":3613,"date":"2018-06-11T10:00:10","date_gmt":"2018-06-11T14:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/practicalmattersjournal.ecdsdev.org\/?p=3613"},"modified":"2018-10-15T14:55:50","modified_gmt":"2018-10-15T18:55:50","slug":"coping-with-loss-of-homeland-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pmcleanup.ecdsdev.org\/2018\/06\/11\/coping-with-loss-of-homeland-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Coping with Loss of Homeland through Orthodox Christian Processions: Contemporary Practices among Setos, Karelians, and Skolt S\u00e1mi in Estonia and Finland"},"content":{"rendered":"
In this article, we focus on the coping, healing, and commemorative aspects of religious rituals, discussing three annual religious feasts that also have significance as expressions of ethnic culture. They are the feast of the Dormition of the Mother of God of the Pskovo-Pechersky Monastery, the Saarivaara Chapel temple feast in North Karelia, and the pilgrimage of Saint Tryphon in Finnish Lapland. All take the form of Orthodox Christian processions or pilgrimages and are situated in symbolically significant landscape in the historical home area of minority groups \u2013 Setos, (Border) Karelians, and Skolt S\u00e1mi. The article relies first and foremost on research material gathered through participant observation in these three religious feasts. <\/em><\/p>\n We are interested in how the Orthodox religion, through the processions and pilgrimages that are our focus, functions as a coping mechanism for the loss of homeland and other traumas related to changing national borders. The issues of loss and trauma are present in all our case studies. The three religious feasts express hardships related to (forced) migration and minority identity in concrete and visible ways. Our analysis demonstrates that the Orthodox religion continues to function as an important source of ethno-religious identity among Setos, Karelians, and Skolt S\u00e1mi. All three feasts take place in symbolically significant locations and help members of these minority groups reconcile the traumatic events of their past with the present-day situation. In all three processions national and ethnic identity is emphasized through concrete means. These include traditional clothes, food, objects, and customs, use of the local language and colloquialisms, non-religious ethnically inspired program, and the presence of respected elders. Through these markers, the groups assign special meanings to the rituals, asserting their identities. Ultimately, these practices are precisely what turn the feasts into manifestations of Seto, Karelian, or Skolt S\u00e1mi Orthodoxy. <\/em>[1]<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Over the course of the past century, Europe has gone through several turbulent periods of change, during which national borders have been redrawn and peoples have been forced to move \u2013 in search of a better life, to preserve their identities, or even to survive. The two world wars and the fall of the Soviet Union are prime examples of such tumultuous times. They catalyzed border changes and waves of migration among many European nations and communities. All these events led to major transformations in the territorial composition of Russia, with repercussions for the surrounding areas. In this article, we discuss three peoples that inhabit or have traditionally inhabited the borderlands between the Russian Federation and two of its western neighbors, the republics of Estonia and Finland. The commonality between these minority groups \u2013 Setos, (Border) Karelians, and Skolt S\u00e1mi \u2013 is that, unlike the majority of Estonians and Finns, they are historically Orthodox Christian by religious affiliation. Furthermore, the living conditions of all groups have been drastically affected by Russo-Estonian and Russo-Finnish border changes over the course of the twentieth century.<\/p>\n The two nations and three peoples this article is concerned with are all linguistically related. Finnish, Estonian, Karelian, and Seto are all Finno-Ugric languages of the Balto-Finnic branch. The Skolt S\u00e1mi language is also counted among the Finno-Ugric languages.[2]<\/a> The special status of the S\u00e1mi as an indigenous people is recognized in the Finnish constitution. Setos, however, declared themselves a people distinct from Estonians only as late as 2000. Russia acknowledges Setos as a separate minority people, but Estonia has not granted them this status. Also Karelians have a similar status in Russia; in Finland they have not sought such recognition.[3]<\/a> In both Finland and Estonia, neighboring peoples speaking kindred languages have been considered \u2018kinsfolk.\u2019 In fact, Finns have traditionally regarded Karelian as a form of Finnish, whereas Estonians have viewed the Seto language as a variation of the South-Estonian dialect. Especially during the Finnish and Estonian nation-building processes, scholars showed great interest in Karelian and Seto culture and folklore. Geopolitically, the territories inhabited by these groups have been considered organic extensions of the territories of Finland and Estonia. All in all, for historical and political reasons, concepts such as ethnicity and nationality are politically loaded for all three minorities. In this article, we strive to refer to the groups with the terms that they use to describe themselves. We speak of both Setos and Skolt S\u00e1mi as peoples. For Karelians, however, we prefer to use the term ethnic group. Most Finnish Karelians today do not consider themselves representatives of a distinct people, but rather a specific subgroup or \u2018tribe\u2019 of the Finnish people.<\/p>\n In the wake of past upheavals, Europe has experienced an expansion and intensification of commemorative culture. Also minority and marginalized communities have begun documenting and collectively processing their histories by various material, narrative, ritual, and performative means, often challenging dominant interpretations of the past. Many of these manifestations of memory have also caught the eye of the scientific community. In Finland, for example, scholars have done extensive research on various commemorative practices adopted by displaced Karelians after the Second World War.[4]<\/a> However, the experiences and practices of many smaller groups, such as Setos and Skolt S\u00e1mi, have yet to receive similar attention.[5]<\/a> In this article, we focus specifically on the coping, healing, and commemorative aspects of religious rituals, discussing three annual religious feasts that also have significance as expressions of ethnic culture. They are the feast of the Dormition of the Mother of God of the Pskovo-Pechersky Monastery, the Saarivaara Chapel temple feast[6]<\/a> in North Karelia, and the pilgrimage of Saint Tryphon in Finnish Lapland. All take the form of Orthodox Christian processions or pilgrimages and are situated in symbolically significant landscape in the historical home area of one of the above-mentioned groups. The rituals, that is to say, are \u2018used\u2019 for crossing national borders, for visiting old home areas, and for cherishing ancestral culture.<\/p>\n
\nIntroduction<\/h3>\n