
More than a million immigrantsDuring it's first year the Reign of Terror of the bolsheviki lead to a significant increase of refugees, who were called `White emigrants'. The following groups of Russians came to France, to settle there temporary or permanently:-The Russian soldiers of the French and Macedonian front, who did not want to return to their native country; -The soldiers of Denikin's and Vrangel's White Army, who were embarked in the ports of the Black Sea, and looked for political asylum in the West, particularly in France, the only country that had recognized the Vrangel administration; -Russian citizens who rightly feared for the measures of the new authorities: people with property, people who could read and write, industrialists, professionals, the landed gentry, high officials, clergymen, Ukrainian nationalists, mensheviki (or members of other non-bolshevist parties, like Social Revolutionaries and Constitutional Democrats - KaDets). The majority of these refugees had left
Russia by way of the Southern borders. Many people travelled via Constantinopel
and hesitated to go to the West, because they kept hoping that the Revolution
would end soon, so that they could return to their native country.
The physicians, lawyers, photographers, writers and artists tried to practice their old professions in France, but the majority was forced to look for odd jobs in Paris (like cab driver, waiter, office clerk, et cetera). Many former soldiers enlisted the Foreign Legion. Almost everyone had a hard time of it.
Misery was increasing and many Russians, who in their home land had known
comparative wealth, lived in bitter poverty.
Paris might have been the capital of the
Russian emigration, but initially Berlin was the literary capital, while
Prague became the most important academical city of the Russian emigrants.
In these cities, but also in Sofia, Belgrade, Warsaw, Tallin and Riga,
lived thousands of Russian refugees.
Cultural and intellectual lifeThe Committee of the Zemstvo's was founded in 1921. This committee was engaged in various forms of assistance to Russian refugees, like the education of Russian children, financial aid of agricultural projects of Russian refugees, and scholarships to adults. In the scholastic year 1929-1930 the committee administered 65 institutions (schools, boarding-schools, orphanages and recreation grounds), for the benefit of 2,500 children. In 1930 the committee was merged with the `Union of Zemstvo Members Outside of Russia', which was resided on the address 6 Rue Daviel, and was headed by chairman Nicholas Avksentiev. The union was the umbrella organization of 102 Russian social institutions.In the early 1920s Montmartre was the
quarter where one Russian cabaret after another was established.
On the address 79 Boulevard Saint-Michel in 1923 the Committee for the Protection of Juvenile Russian Students Outside of Russia was founded, in which some existing organizations for Russian emigrants were merged. In the academical year 1929 360 scholarships were subjected to Russian youngsters, and they had two apartment-houses, in which 75 students were put up. Chairman of the committee was Michael Feodorov. In the same building the National Russian Committee was resided, of which Antoine Kartashev was chairman. From 1921 more than forty Russian professors were engaged by the University of Paris. Professor Nicholas Kuhlman (1871-1940) was chairman of the Russian department of the literary faculty. In 1941 this department was closed down by order of the Germans. In the early 1920s, on the corner of the Closerie des Lilas, resided the Café de Port-Royal (22 Avenue de l'Observatoire), where the literary and artistic circle `Right Across' gathered. Many young Russians were member of this group, among them the poets Ginger and Poplavsky, and the plastic artists Krémègne, Lanskoy, Pougny, Tereshkovich and Zadkine. The ACER (Christian Union of Russian Students)
was founded in 1923, by Vasili Zenkovsky, who was appointed chairman. In
1926 the union moved into a part of the premises of the YMCA, 10 Boulevard
du Montparnasse. In 1928 the garage was rebuild into a Russian-Orthodox
chapel. The ACER was a center of cultural and religious activities. In
December 1931 the Russian study center KIR was founded in the building,
and until 1939 it organized many conferences.
Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich Romanoff lived from July 1923 to October 1929 in Santeny (Val-de- Marne), in the Chƒteau de Choigny. There he founded a Russian-Orthodox chapel, where the Cossacks of his former regiment sang on Russian-Orthodox feasts. Late 1923, early 1924, a group of former
teachers of the Imperial Russian conservatories founded the Russian Conservatory
of Paris. At first the conservatory was resided in the Rue de Douai, and
later in the Avenue de Tokio, but in 1932 they moved into the present premises
on the address 26 Avenue de New York, where the institute was renamed Conservatoire
Serge Rakhmaninov. On May 7, 1933 there was a reception in honour to the
60th anniversary of Rakhmaninov.
The Committee of Russian Organizations was founded in 1924, to see after the legal and financial interests of many Russian unions and foundations. The committee was resided on the address 3 Rue Nicolo. At first the committee was the umbrella organization of 67 organizations. In 1929 175 institutions were part of the committee, but in 1936 this number had risen to 325. On July 18, 1924, the day of St. Sergius,
the protestant church on the address Rue de Crimée was bought for
the amount of 321,000 francs, and renamed `Colline Saint-Serge'. The money
was gathered by the Russian community of Paris. On March 1, 1925 the Russian-Orthodox
church was consecrated by Metropolitan Evlogi, and at the same time the
Russian-Orthodox Theological Institute of Paris was founded. On April 30,
1925 the first lectures were given. Professor Antoine Kartashev, who before
the Revolution was engaged by the Theological Academy of St. Petersburg,
spoke about the history of the primitive Church.
From 1925 the Society of Young Russian
Writers and Poets, also known as the `Russian Club', weekly, and sometimes
more often, organized literary evenings on the address 79 Avenue Denfert-Rochereau.
The last enters of Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in Paris were from 1926 to 1929, in the Théƒtre Sarah Bernhardt, 12 Place du Chƒtelet, nowadays the Théƒtre de la Ville. From June 27, 1927 Pas d'acier of Serge Prokofyev and Grigori Yakulov was performed, with Lyubova Chernisheva and Serge Lifar in the leading parts. From June 12, 1928 there was the performance of Strawinsky's Apollon musagète. The choreography was done by George Balanchine, and Serge Lifar interpreted the part of Apollo. On May 21, 1929 was the première of Le fils prodigue, with music by Prokofyev and the choreography once more by Balanchine. Serge Lifar was in brilliant form in the leading part. `Rakhmaninov was sitting on the first row and showed his appreciation several times,' Prokofyev wrote proudly in his memoirs. In 1933 Balanchine left for the United States; Strawinsky settled down there in 1939. Diaghilev died in 1929. Late 1929 the Union of Russian Cab Drivers,
which had more than 1,200 members, took residence in the premises 65 Rue
Letelier. Many Russian cab drivers had been officers in the Imperial Army.
Just before World War II there were more than 3,000 Russian cab drivers,
but in 1945 less than 1,500 were left.
Café des Deux-Magots. The painter Natalia Goncharova often visited this café when she had dined in the restaurant Le petit Saint-BenoŒt, in the Rue Saint-BenoŒt. Bella Reine wrote, `One day I walked into the Deux-Magots, as I saw Goncharova sit at a table with a strange woman. She gesticulated that I should come towards her, and after a little chat we stood up and sat down at another table. I asked her who the woman was. ``She is Russian, a prostitute who's specialized in elderly, cultivated gentlemen. I talk to her, now and then, because no Russian wants to be seen in her company.''' Le D“me. This café was often visited by the sculptor Arshipenko and the painters Kandinsky and Survage. Picasso once said, `You can see Utrillo drunk everywhere, but Modigliani only gets drunk in the Rotonde or in the D“me.' Café de la Rotonde. This café
was opened in 1911, and was, early this century, the haunt of Russian artists
like Arshipenko, Chagall, Shterenberg, Goncharova, Kikoyin, Krémègne,
Larionov, Mané-Klatz, Marevna, Shana Orlov, Soutine, Maria Vasiliev
and Zadkine. One could also meet the following writers there: the poet
and art critic Maximilian Voloshin, the poet Khodassevich and his companion
Nina Berberova, and Ilya Ehrenburg. Trotsky came there in 1915 and 1916,
to copy his articles for a Kievian newspaper from the French and English
newspapers. Vladimir Mayakovsky mentioned the café at the end of
his poem Verlaine et Cézanne (1924), and in May 1925, after a soirée
of the Union of Young Russian Poets and Writers, the members settled down
in the Rotonde, together with Khodassevich, who hadn't been there before.
Café Le Sélect. In the thirties this café was frequented by the Russian poets Adamovich, Ginger, Odarchenko and Anna Prismanova. Closerie des Lilas. This café,
which was rebuilt and modernized in 1925, has always been a haunt of writers.
Nicholas Stepanovich Gumilyov, who in those days still studied in the Sorbonne,
met in 1907 the poet Jean Moréas there. From 1911 Ilya Ehrenburg
spent his days there writing. Marevna, who came to Paris in the fall of
1912, met him one evening in the Closerie. `He had very long hair, hanging
on his shoulders, and it was greasy. He was dressed very sloppy, and looked
in every way like the nihilists about whom one can read in foreign novels.
But his eyes were compelling and beautiful. His way of speech was very
mordant.'
1921
March 1: Moshe Goldstein's newspaper Posledniya Novosti (The Last News) was initially independent, but since today it is the official organ of the Constitutional Democratic (KaDet-) Party. The historian and politician Paul Nikolaevich Milyukov, one of the founders of the party, is now editor-in-chief. He can count on the co-operation of almost all Russian writers and journalists who reside in Paris. On the ground floor of the premises is the café Dupont, where the staff of the newspaper often drinks a cup of coffee or a beer. March 17: Bloody oppression of the Kronstadt
rebellion. In 1917 the bolshevists promised the navy men in Kronstadt economical,
political and social reforms, if they only would take part in the Revolution,
but after the Revolution the navy men saw that Lenin was just another dictator,
a Pugachov, and that they had been fooled. During their rise hundreds of
sailors are executed.
July 21: Count Anatol Feodorovich Buxhoeveden
(1844-1921), member of the former Imperial Council, who lived in exile
in Helsinki, Finland, since 1918, dies. His son Alexander and his family
move to Paris.
August 2: Famine strikes thirty million Russians. Lenin asks the world for help. From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: August 14, 1921: It was difficult to say goodbye to Omsk. August 15, 1921: The train moves slowly, passing endless deportation trains from the famine areas of the Volga and the North. The cattle trains are crowded with people, piled up like coal: men, women, children. But are this still people? Many of them lost their teeth, their gums are bleeding, their faces are green and ash-gray. August 21: The poet Alexander Blok has
passed away in Petrograd! In the café Camél&e- acute;on,
146 Boulevard du Montparnasse, Paris, the gathering of the Putskamer, a
group of Russian poets of the new generation, in which particularly Alexander
Ginger (1897-1965) plays a creative part, is entirely dedicated to the
Russian poet.
From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: August 22, 1921: In the early morning we returned to the city we left in a panic on June 9, 1919. August 24: The bolsheviks accuse Patriarch Tikhon and the other leaders of the Church of having contact with the emigrés, which is strictly forbidden by Soviet legislation. At the invitation of the Patriarch of Serbia, escaped Russian bishops hold a Council at Sremsky-Karlovci in Yugoslavia, at which a temporary ecclesiastical administration for Russian Orthodox in exile is worked out. The Synod is headed by Anthony Khrapovitsky, formerly Metropolitan of Kiev, and adopts a resolution to restore the rights of the Romanoffs to the throne of Russia, by which the speakers hint that the leaders of the Russian Church in Moscow share this opinion. That's why the bolsheviki accuse Patriarch Tikhon of treason. September 15: Baron Roman von Ungern-Sternberg
is sentenced to death. This so-called `White' General conducted a veritable
reign of terror in Mongolia, from January to July. He was financially supported
by the Japanese government, which appreciates the anticommunist points
of view of the `White' General.
September 18: John Mott founds the YMCA-Press in Prague. His publishing-house is specialized in Russian literature. October 26: The Russian writer Zinaida Hippius (1869-1945) and her husband Dmitri Me- rezhkovsky (1865-1941) write the anticommunist pamphlet The Empire of the Antichrist. November 5: Birthday of my grandmother Princess Alexandra Constantinovna Obolensky, née Countess Mussin-Pushkin. Nobody heard anything of her since November 1917. This day she would have become 36. December 23: Prince Michael Feodorovich Obolensky, my grandfather, is murdered by the bolsheviks in a Moscow prison. 1922
January 11: Metropolitan Anthony asks the Synod to openly choose the side of the Whites. The Soviet government accuses Patriarch Tikhon of having contact with the Synod and demands that he excommunicates the members of the Synod, amongst who bishop Evlogi of Paris. The Patriarch replies that he's not competent to excommunicate people who are outside the territory of his Patriarchate. February 23: The bolsheviki order to confiscate all ecclesiastical objects within a month and to turn them over to the People's Commissionary of Treasury. February 28: The Patriarch reacts with an appeal, in which he calls the ukase of the government an act of sacrilege. He calls upon all believers to resist. This appeal of the Patriarch is heard in the entire country. In many cities, towns and villages the believers resist the confiscation of ecclesiastical treasures, which results in bloody confrontations; thousands of people are persecuted, many are executed. February 28: The Russian poet Marina Ivanovna
Tsvetaeva (1892-1941), who is befriended with writers like Rilke and Pasternak,
escapes from the Soviet-Union, to join her husband Serge Efron in Prague.
When the direct funding from Russia dries
out because Holland doesn't recognize the Soviet-Union, ad- interim chargé
d'affaires Paul Poustochkine and his wife, Nathalie Likhachev (1889-1969),
try to make a living as art painters. Nathalie is a skillful portrait painter,
who was a student in the Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg. Paul earns
a little money on the side by selling antiques, while Nathalie designs
dresses for the ladies of the Dutch high society. But even with that it's
hard to make ends meet, especially because Paul is still the representative
of Russia, and has to pay for all official ceremonies that belong to the
obligations of his office, out of his own pocket. Paul Poustochkine: `On
behalf of the Dutch government we see after the interests of Russian prisoners
of war in Turkey and Bulgaria. In Belgium this task is performed by my
Spanish colleague Marquis de Villalobar.'
Initially Paul Poustochkine is appointed
the diplomatic representative of the Denikin administration, and later
of the Vrangel administration.
Queen Wilhelmina is glad to see the back of the Soviet Russians. She says, `You may recognize as much as you like, as long as you don't expect me to receive the envoy of Soviet-Russia.' The government understands this point of view. `We don't want to force the Queen to receive a representative of the ones who brutally killed her relatives - Her Majesty's grandmother was a Romanoff.' May 1: Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich Romanoff moves into the Villa Thénard, 66, Boulevard du Cap, Antibes. He uses the name of `Borissov', which was the name of his estate in Russia. Nicholas Nikolaevich is married to Princess Anastasia of Montenegro. May 5: Patriarch Tikhon officially declares the ecclesiastical supreme council abroad abolished, but the charges of collaboration with the Whites aren't dropped. May 17: Patriarch Tikhon and his locum tenens Agafangel are arrested. May 18: The traitor Vedensky and his obnovlentsi
(`innovators of the Church') are permitted to visit Patriarch Tikhon in
prison, to force him to turn over the leadership of the Church to them.
After an hour and a half Tikhon gives in.
May 19: The membership of a Scouting Club is officially prohibited. Although hundreds of scouts and leaders are murdered, the organization continues its existence in illegality, waiting for better times, that will not come. All cub scouts, brownies, scouts, and cub mistresses are considered Enemies of the Revolution. New York, May 20: The first edition of Kuzbas, a `Bulletin devoted to the Affairs of the Industrial Colony Kuzbas (5 cents)', `Kuzbas, an effort to strengthen Soviet Russia, by S.J. Rutgers (Engineer and Member of Management Board). Workers of the World, Unite! KUZBAS is being surrounded by so much romanticism that many workers are likely to lose sight of the solid foundation and practical importance of the project. To clear the ground of the glamour that has arisen around a rather sober ``Prospectus'' it would be well to state briefly what Kuzbas is NOT. (...)KUZBAS is no place for theorists
nor for dreamers nor is it a place to try out the plans for a future society.
It is a place to work and to work hard in order to strengthen the Worker's
Soviet Republic's economic front against capitalism. (...)
June 10: Metropolitan Benjamin has to appear before a tribunal. July 6: Metropolitan Benjamin is executed. The trial and the execution cause anger and dejection among all believers. August 8: Grand Duke Kiril Vladimirovich Romanoff (1876-1938), grandson of Alexander II, who since 1921 lives in the villa Ker Argonid, 33 rue de Pleurtuit, in Saint-Briac sur Mer, Brittany, signs a manifesto in Saint-Briac in which he proclaims himself `chief of the Imperial House of Russia and administrator of the crown'. August 21: After two years of forced stay in Constantinopel, Tatiana Nikolaevna Masalitinov and her family leave for Bulgaria. Bulgaria is a very poor country, and life there is extremely difficult. Tatiana Nikolaevna meets and marries her Vladimir, a young Russian officer who fought in the White Army. Moscow, December 30: Since today Russia is officially named `Union of Socialist Soviet Republics' (USSR). Stalin is appointed Secretary General of the Communist Party. 1923
From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: June
7, 1923: Arnulf has left the house without me. The philosophical club has
its debate night and I can't come, because my boy Jurka-Alexander needs
me.
Paris, June 13: Première of Strawinsky's ballet Noces, in the Théƒtre de la Gaite-Lyrique. The choreography was done by Bronislava Nijinsky (a younger sister of Viachlav), while Natalia Goncharova was responsible for the décors and the costumes. July 14: Igor Sikorsky manages to gather 800 dollars in cash and 2,000 dollars in doubtful promises, and with twelve Russian refugees, who work for him without being payd, he begins to build his first aeroplane in the United States. His `factory' is in the open, behind a chicken farm in Long Island. From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: November 17, 1923: Professor Beloborodov suffers terribly under the mental pressure of the bolsheviki. He visited us tonight, pale, emaciated, in short: a man on the brink of the precipice. 1924
Paris, January 24: The yearly Russian
writer's ball in the Salle Bullier, for the benefit of colleague's in need.
The play-bill says, `This yearly ball is known in all Paris as the most
quaint ball of Montparnasse.
September 13: Grand Duke Kiril Vladimirovich Romanoff, who lives in Brittany, adopts the title of `Tsar of all Russians'. 1925
From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: April 16, 1925: Arnulf is over the moon! He was offered a chair abroad! I am so afraid. We're leaving Russia in about a month. May 11, 1925: Tomorrow we travel to Moscow. We want to stay there as long as necessary to get hold of all the paperwork. June 1, 1925: Two suitcases with linen, two pillows and two blankets. That's how we leave the country of the proletarians. We have sold everything, and with the profits we will try to start a new life abroad. June 18, 1925: Because it took so long before we could leave Russia, the faculty who invited Arnulf has hired someone else. Paris, August 4: The painter Ivan Yakovlevich
Bilibin and his wife Alexandra Shchekotikhin Pototskaya move to the address
25 Boulevard Pasteur. Bilibin, a pupil of Ilya Efimovich Repin (1844-1930),
escaped from Russia in 1920, after which he had lived in Egypt for five
years. His wife Alexandra blandly exhibits her work in the pavillion of
the Soviet-Union, on the World Exhibition of Decorative Art. Every Wednesday
she entertains escaped Russian writers, journalists and artists. The Soviet
Russian journalist Ivan Mozalevsky wrote, `Ivan Yakovlevich friendly took
my arm, and led me to the middle of the studio, where he announced in his
high-pitched voice, ``May I introduce you to my former pupil and friend
Ivan Ivanovich Mozalevsky. Sure, he's a bolshevik, but he's not a bad kid.''
Many guests left the studio, while the others maintained a sinister silence.
Only some young writers and journalists looked at me inquisitive.
October 17: Choreographer George Balanchine, pseudonym of Grigori Melitonovich Balanchivadze (1904-1983), who carries on the Petersburg tradition, succeeds Bronislava Nijinska as house choreographer of the Ballets Russes in Paris. November 1: The writer Marina Tsvetaeva,
who has just arrived from Prague, together with her daughter Ariadna and
her son Grigori, moves in with Russian friends, on the address 8 Rue Bouvet,
Paris.
Paris, December 5: The Soyuz Dvoryan (Union of Russian Aristocrats) is founded. (The union still exists and is resided in Paris, 1 Square the Chƒtillon. The present President is Prince Serge Sergeevich Obolensky.) From Alexandra Rakhmanova's diary: December 22, 1925: Arnulf just returned from one of his rambles through the city. Tired and low-spirited he dropped on the bed, in which Jurka-Alexander is sleeping. His face is tensed and gloomy. It is absolutely impossible to get a job, whatever you try. Living of the pen is completely out of the question. The editors don't know which way to turn with all the manuscripts that are dropped on their desks every morning. December 23: John Mott's YMCA-Press moves from Prague to Paris (where it still is resided on the address 11 Rue de la Montagne Sainte-Geneviève). December 28: The French railroads hired 250 Russian emigrants, who are accommodated in barracks near the station of Clermont-Ferrand. One of these Russian workers says, `Every Sunday the whole population of the town comes to look at us. We feel like monkeys in a zoo. Yet civilization isn't completely strange to us, because we sing songs of Mussorgsky and others, conducted by a colleague who has been a musician in the Opera of Odessa.' December 30: Igor Strawinsky visits the United States for the first time. Count Paul Ignatieff, the director of
the Russian Red Cross in Paris, is considered an important official and
assembles with many important people, like President Herbert Hoover of
the United States and other heads of state. His wife Natasha, who lives
in Sussex, however keeps thinking of herself as a refugee and stays homesick
for Russia. The children grow up as English lads.
Paris in the interbellumIn the interbellum more than half of the Russian expatriates who went to France, lived in Paris.Paris, of course, had a enormous gravitational pull, but life there often didn't come up the expectations of the refugees at all. Eight adults living in one tiny room wasn't exceptional. Ilya Ehrenburg: `Instead of a blue sky there was a filthy, wadding smoke, which absorbed all greasy odours and the smell of human excrements. No, this Paris didn't look at all like paradise. (...) In the Rue Morillon is a lovely abattoir, and around it spring up hundreds of small businesses, where wine is sold at the counter. Fattened up cattle-traders, whose aprons are covered with ox blood, come in. They poor the blood red wine inside, as a result of which their cheeks turn purple. (...) They gorge down the white wine in gallons, and bite in pieces of cheese, which give out a smell that reminds me of soldiers' feet. (...) The rag-pickers gather on the Boulevard Pasteur, at 5 a.m. From time to time they disagree over a broken plate, often the bitches even scuffle. They grab each other's sweaty hairs, which are full of lice, after which they go through the dust-bins once more. On the address 38 Rue Falgier is a brothel, with beautiful boys. Right across the brothel is a police-station. (...) Furthermore one can find pharmacists here, without diploma's, who sell drugs which are supposed to cure the clap. (...) All this crawls about the streets and does its work. It swallows a hot potato, right out of the frying-pan, without even masticating it; it drinks miserable wines, it smoothes out crumpled, greasy paper francs; it sings its sentimental, tear jerking songs, in short it suffers (sic) from its rich and shaded, joyful life. This is Paris.' The expatriates' statusses differed. Some
were naturalized French citizens, by request or by marrying a French citizen.
Others kept the nationality of the first country they went to after they
had escaped, for example Yugoslavia or Czechoslowakia. There were also
Russians who preferred to keep the refugee status, and they were holders
of an identity-card which was called the `Nansen passport', after the United
Nations High Commissioner for the Refugees.
A. Russian Freemasons Who Escaped Abroad B. Last Resting Places C: Families of Rurik Stock |
