Brief History of the Reindeer Peoples
Reindeer Herding in the Easter Sayan -
The story of
the Soyot by Larisa R. Pavlinskaya,
The Okinsky Region within The Buryat Republic of Russia
occupies the central plateau and the surrounding ranges of the Easter Sayan
Mountain. Today it is the inhabited predominately by two ethnic groups – the
Soyot and the Buryat. The total population of the region is 4,595, 2,039
Soyot, 2506 Buryat and 50 Russian. The majority of these peoples now
practice mountain-Style cattle breeding.
The ancestors of the Soyots (and of the closely related Tofa, Tozhu and
Dukah) were proto-Samoyedic hunter-gatherers who arrived in the Eastern
Sayan region from Eastern Siberia at the end of the Third millennium BC and
the beginning of the second millennium BC. Subsequently, cattle-breeding
Tungus (Evenki) and Ket peoples came to the Sayan Mountains at the turn of
the first millennium AD. These peoples began to domesticate reindeer and
turned this Eastern Sayan region- which encompasses the mountainous taiga
areas of present-day Tofalaria in southwestern Irkustk Oblast`, the Tozhu
District in the Republic of Tyva, the Okinsky region of Buryatia, and the
Lake Khovsgol area of Mongolia-into the first center of reindeer herding and
breeding in the world. The region also had favorable conditions for mountain
cattle breeding, allowing the co-existence and cooperation of two
complementary economic-cultural systems.
Turkic-language cattle- and horse-breeding peoples moved up from the Inner
Asian steppes at the beginning of the first millennium AD and extensively
influenced the Samoyedic, Ket, and Tungus populations of the Eastern Sayan
Mountains. While the Samoyeds adopted the Turkic language as well as some
other elements of Turkic material and spiritual culture, they could not be
fully subjugated and assimilated by either the Turkic-speaking tribes nor,
later by the Mongolians. The reindeer-herding peoples managed to resist the
onslaught of these cattle and horse breeders by retreating into the
inaccessible mountains, and by proving themselves indispensable to the
newcomer steppe peoples by providing them with invaluable furs. Throughout
the Middle Ages the group retained not only its hunting, reindeer-herding,
and cattle-breeding traditions, but also its ethnic identity and culture.
The Russian Empire first penetrated the Eastern Sayans in the middle of the
17th century, and by the beginning of the 18th century had taken control of
the entire area. The Russian government resettled 100 Buryat families from
the steppe and forest-steppe regions of Pribaikalia and Transbaikilia to the
Okinsky area, where they were supposed to guard the Chinese border. From
this point the historical path of the Soyots diverges from that of the Tofa,
Tozhu, and Dukha. The newly arrived Buryats had to adopt some of the habits
of the indigenous Soyot in order to survive. For example, they took up yak
breeding and learned to migrate seasonally. The Buryats also adopted the
practice of using reindeer as mounts to hunt, but never took up reindeer
herding and preferred borrowing reindeer solely for the hunting season or
keeping their own reindeer among Soyot herds.
But the influence of the Buryats on the Soyot was much greater. By the end
of the 19th century, the Buryats dominated administratively; their language
had for all practical purposes replaced the Soyots' adopted Turlic language;
and their cattle-breeding culture soon came to predominate over reindeer
herding, even for many Soyots.
But reindeer herding was not completely lost. Reindeer still enabled the
Soyot to travel through vast territories of mountainous taiga that were
completely impassable by any other domesticated animal, and were
indispensable for hunting. The deer also provided the Soyot with clothes,
dwellings, various household items, milk, and meat.
Documents from the first anthropological expedition into the Soyot
reindeer-herding region in 1926' describe a difficult period in Russian
history and present Soyot reindeer herding as a dying branch of the economy.
But later research and data collected from Soyot elders show that the
herding tradition easily overcame the period's difficulties and endured
until the middle of the 20th century, when the government interfered.
The final destruction of the ancient Soyot reindeer-herding traditions began
in the early 1930s when all individually owned herds were commandeered by
the Soviet state and tinited into one collective herd. In 1940, the
government designated the Okinsky Region an aimag, a larger administrative
district than before, and officially recognized its entire population as
Buryat, thereby effectively denying the existence of the Soyot as an ethnic
group. Soyot elders in the late 19B0s said the policy drew a great deal of
disapproval from the Scyot population when it was announced, but the
political sittiation of the time prevented people from openly protesting.
The policy caused a gradual erosion of the Soyot national identity, arid the
next generation of Scyot called themselves Buryat. The final blow to
traditional nomadic reindeer herding was dealt in 1.963 when the Soviet
government labeled the practice unprofitable and disbanded the herd. By the
late 1980s, the Soyot population appeared to be completely assimilated into
Bury-at culture-only 30 people still identified themselves as Soyot.
When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the Soyot population suddenly spoke
out. The revival of Soyot identity was practically instantaneous, and after
several years the Soyot reappeared as a separate ethnic group. In 1993, they
founded the Association of the Soyot Nation, uniting 812 people; in 1999,
according to the data of the local census bureau, the Soyot population was
2,039, or 43.7 percent of the total population of the Okinsky region. The
Soyot have successfully restored their name and identity as one of the
officially recognized indigenous Small-Numbered Peoples of the North. In
2000, following the request of the government of the Okirisky Region, the
People's Khural (Grand Assembly) of the Republic of Buryatia agreed to
change the name of the Okinsky Region to the Soyot National Aimag. The Soyot
were again reborn and set out on the course for further development.
Throughout this period of cultural renaissance, the Soyot have been striving
to reintroduce reindeer herding, which they increasingly realize is
essential for their ethnic identity and traditional culture. In 1992 the
administration of the region, with support from Ecologically Sustainable
Development, a U.S.-based non-governmental organization, purchased 63
reindeer from the neigh-boring Tofa and gave them to a Soyot cattle-breeding
family who lived in the area of traditional reindeer herding. The family
received two years of herder training from the Tofa, and while international
funding was available the herd increased to more than 100 head.
Unfortunately, within two to three years of the close of foreign support,
wolf predation and lack of experience on the part of the Soyot herders led
to a decline in the herd. The major challenge for the Soyot herders was to
recognize arid be willing to undertake the rigors
of reindeer herding, including frequent seasonal migrations, long periods of
time supervising the deer in the remote taiga far removed from village life,
and the daily building of smudge-pots to ward off biting insects. In 1997,
the 76 remaining reindeer were entrusted to the Darnbayev family, who
reorganized the herd with more care and vigilance, but a sudden episode of
necro-badillosis (a hoof-deteriorating disease) and frequent winter wolf
attacks killed off more of the herd. In 1999 fewer than 60 reindeer
remained, and only 12 survived a year later.
Even though the reindeer-herding tradition had been broken for only 30
years-the life span of just one generation-its reintroduction was on the
verge of failure. Elders who possessed skills and knowledge accumulated
through the centuries had died; their experiences had comprised not only
practical skills but, above all, the traditional pattern of behavior that
determined the herdsmen's attitudes toward their reindeer and lifestyle.
Reindeer herding required love and understanding of the reindeer, as well as
devotion to the nomadic life. It obliged indifference to comfort, delight in
hunting, and other traits that had kept this type of economy afloat for many
centuries.
Reindeer herding had been instilled into the herders' being from their birth
and had molded their emotional understanding of their place in the world.
With a generation of herders lost, the Soyot must now find some way to
revive the attitude that helped their ancestors preserve their ethnic
identity and integrity throughout the ages and in the most difficult periods
of history.
Source - Reindeer Herding in the Easter Sayan - The story of
the Soyot, Larisa R. Pavlinskaya,
The Troubled Taiga: Survival on the Move for the Lost Nomadic Reindeer Herders of South Siberia, Mongolia, and
China Cultural Survival Quarterly, Spring 2003, Volume 27, Issue 1, pages
45-47. |