The Mongols Dined Atop their Live Enemies and Other Fascinating Historic Facts

The Mongols Dined Atop their Live Enemies and Other Fascinating Historic Facts

Khalid Elhassan - March 2, 2020

The Mongols Dined Atop their Live Enemies and Other Fascinating Historic Facts
A 1902 publication introducing Canadians to the newly arrived Doukhobors. Prints and Ephemera

36. Trouble Adjusting to Canada

The Doukhobors first arrived in Saskatchewan in 1902, their emigration facilitated by Leo Tolstoy and the Society of Friends, or Quakers. At first, the Canadians saw the industrious Doukhobors as ideal settlers. However, their religious beliefs prevented them from swearing allegiance to the Crown, which led to their deprivation of title to lands that had been allotted them.

The Doukhobors viewed that as a breach of promise by the authorities. Embittered, they trekked to British Columbia, where they established drab little communal villages on government land. The sect’s leader, a charismatic figure named Peter Verigin, maintained a semblance of control over his nudist followers by flogging them with brambles. Then some Doukhobors blew him up with dynamite in 1924. With their leader’s demise, the Doukhobors fractured into rival factions, and things swiftly spun into a downward spiral of crazy.

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