Everything about Kola Norwegians totally explained
The Kola Norwegians were
Norwegian settlers along the coastline of the
Kola Peninsula in
Russia.
In
1860 the Russian
Tsar Alexander II granted permission for Norwegian settlements on the Kola. Around
1870, scores of families from
Finnmark in northern
Norway departed for the Kola coast, attracted by the prospects of fishing and trade. The Russian authorities granted them
privileges to trade with Norway.
Most of them settled in
Tsyp-Navolok (Цыпнаволок) on the easternmost tip of the
Rybachiy Peninsula (Полуостров Рыбачий; Norw.:
Fiskerhalvøya - both terms meaning
Fishermen's Peninsula). Others settled in
Vaydaguba (Вайдагуба) at the northwestern tip (мыс Немецкий, Cape Nemetskiy, "Cape German") of the same peninsula. A vibrant society developed, retaining contact with Norway. especially with the town of
Vardø in Norway. Some settlers returned to Norway shortly after the
Russian Revolution of 1917, but most of them remained at Tsyp-Navolok. In 1917 perhaps about 1000 lived on the Kola.
In
1930, the fishermen were forced into the labour collective
"Poljarnaja Zvezda" (Norw.:
Polarstjernen, Eng.:
Polaris). Beginning in
1936, persecution by the
Soviet authorities under
Joseph Stalin hit the small community hard. At least 15 were shot after summary trials, or starved to death in Soviet
Soviet labour camps. It is alleged that some were denounced, sentenced and executed for having talked in Norwegian.
On
23 June 1940 Lavrenty Beria of the
NKVD ordered the
Murmansk Oblast, encompassing the entire Kola Peninsula, to be cleaned of "foreign nationals". As a result, the entire Norwegian population was deported for
resettlement in the
Karelo-Finnish SSR. Soon they'd to move from there too, because of pressures caused by the
Finnish invasion of the Soviet Union in
1941. In spring
1942, a large proportion died of starvation and malnutrition.
Despite many having served in the
Soviet Army, they were not allowed to return home to the Kola after the end of the
Second World War. Many children were raised without learning to speak Norwegian.
After
1990, some descendants of the original settlers began to emphasise their family backgrounds, although only a few had been able to maintain a rusty knowledge of the
Vardø dialect of the Norwegian language. Some have now migrated to Norway. There are special provisions in the Norwegian kingdom's immigration law which eases this process, albeit generally being less permissive than those which pertain in other countries which operate a "
right of 'return'". In order to obtain a permit to
move to Norway and work there, a foreign citizen must show an adequate connection to the country, such as having two or more grandparents who were born there. As for citizenship, it's awarded on the same basis as to anyone else - which basis includes the formal renunciation of the original citizenship. By 2004 approximately 200 Kola Norwegians had settled in Norway.
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