Bazsites.com Doukhobor
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Doukhobor Collection - A searchable catalog of documents in English and Russian on the Doukhobor faith community.
- The Spirit Wrestlers - Information about Doukhobor culture in Canada, excerpts from books about the group, and a large collection of links to other internet resources about the Doukhobors and related faith communities.
- The Doukhobors: "Spirit Wrestlers" - Canadian Museum of Civilization online exhibit on this history of this group in western Canada.
- Doukhobors - Introduction to this sect and its history in British Columbia, Canada. With links to related resources.
- Doukhobor Genealogy Website - Internet resource for Doukhobor genealogy. Includes history, stories and articles, message boards and related links.
- Doukhobors - A sect believing that Jesus Christ is a spiritually advanced teacher and example to others and that people are capable of divine reason and can spiritually develop without the help of intermediaries.
- ISKRA Magazine - Voice of the Doukhobors - Selected articles, with general background information on this group, its history and culture in Canada, and its commitment to pacifism. Includes a small collection of historical photos.
- Favorite Recipes from Uncle Bill's Kitchen - Cookbook presentation with sample recipes reflecting Bill Anatooskin's Doukhobor heritage.
- Nemanishen Reunion - Celebrating 100 Years in Canada and Doukhobor heritage.
Wikipedia Articles
- Doukhobor Russian - The Doukhobors are a Christian sect who in 1899 established a number of commune-style settlements in Western Canada. They are the last speakers of a Russian dialect which is unique to their communities.
- Leopold Antonovich Sulerzhitsky - Leopold Antonovich Sulerzhitsky was a Russian author whose diary kept track of early Doukhobor life before, during, and just after the Doukhobor's migration to Canada at the beginning of the twentieth century. The published diary is called, "To America with the Doukhobors.
- Freedomites - Freedomites, also called Svobodniki or Sons of Freedom, first appeared in 1902 in Saskatchewan, Canada, and later in the Kootenay and Boundary districts of British Columbia, as a Doukhobor extremist group. Of the about 20,000 Doukhobor living in Canada today, about 2,500 are Freedomites.
- Doukhobor - The Doukhobors or Doukhabors (Dukhobory, Dukhobortsy) () are a Christian dissenting sect of Russian origin.