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Mennonites from Galicia (Kleinpolen):
Some Historical Notes
by Glen Linscheid
© copyright "Mennonite Historian"and Glenn
Linscheid, all rights
reserved
First Published by the "Mennonite Historian" Vol.XXI, No. 3,
September 1995, pages
1-2.
Republished with eMail permission by FEEFHS 24 February
1997
The historical accounts of cruel persecution unto death suffered
by the early Swiss
Anabaptists have been well-documented. Seeking escape and
refuge, many fled into the
Rheinpfalz of German Palantinate. One source puts it this way:
"After the Thirty Years'
War the Rheinpfalz was in a sorry state. Trees and brush covered
much of the fields. Of
livestock there was practically none ... The Elector wanted his
former peasant land, now
reduced to rubble, to be populated again with strong workers."(1)
Providential concessions and inducements caused their Rheinpfalz
sojourn to prosper, despite
some unjust restrictions, leading to an eventual over-abundance
of settlers, usually with large
families. We quote another historian as follows: "By today's
standards the conditions under
which the Anabaptists settled in Germany would seem somewhat
discriminatory. They were
allowed freedom of worship but forbidden to build their own
churches, were not allowed to
meet in groups larger than twenty members, and were prohibited
from doing evangelistic
work among their neighbours. Later they were denied the right to
live in cities, and
marriage required the consent of the government."(2)
In 1772 upon the first partition of Poland, Galicia, (Kleinpolen)
became part of the
Austrian Empire. Galicia was a predominately agrarian society,
undeveloped culturally, with
a peasant population largely uneducated and poor. Large sections
of the region were
properties of the Church and the aristocracy. Monasteries also
had large land holdings. The
Polish nobility valued hunting and other enterainments above
developing the land and its
people. Galicia was wild and untamed.
In 1780 the Austrian emporer, Franz Joseph II, extended an offer
to German farmers to
settle the land gained through this Polish partitioning. Thus in
1784 six Mennonite families
joined this eastward flood of humanity out of Germany. The
Mennonite surnames included
Bachmann, Ewy, Krehiel, Mundelien and Schrag. By 1786,
twenty-one more families
followed them. Their surnames included Bergthold, Brubacher,
Huwen, (Hubin), Klein,
Kintzi, Linscheid, Merk, Müller (Miller), Rupp and Schmidt.
The first settlement was
named Falkenstein after their Rheinpfalz home. Its location was
about 40 kilometers
southwest of Lemberg (L'vov, L'vov), their chief cultural,
governmental and economic
center.
New settlements grew as the population increased. Einsiedel and
Rosenberg spawned the
daughter colonies of Neuhof, Kiernica, Wiszenka, Ehrenfeld,
Troscianiec, Debrovalny,
Lipowice and Podusilna. Following the lead of some 80 years
earlier, in 1862, another
smaller group from Rheinpfalz settled in Galacia. Their surnames
included Forrer, Jotter,
Laise (Leisy) and Stauffer. The total Mennonite population
increased from 72 families in
1856 to 142 families in 1880.
Up to this time, pastors were chosen from within the
congregation. But with settlements
being in such scattered locations, the lament of "we are sheep
without a shepherd" was
heard. A further quote has it thus: "The number of elders and
preachers was not sufficient
to meet the needs of the ever-spreading church. So in 1860
Johann Klein and Jakob
Müller were elected preachers...
Those at Kiernica formed their own congregation in fellowship
with the large one at
Einsiedel. They chose Johannes van der Smissen as their elder...
But van der Smissen had
hard going, inasmuch as some members and preachers had freer
thoughts about some points
of doctrine. Even today (1934), some talk about the "religious
war of the Mennonites in
1865."(3)
Attempts at bringing in other preachers from outside the
congregation during the years
1910-1929 proved less than favorable for various reasons.
Heinrich Pauls, Leopold Gesell
and Christian Guth pastored during those years.
"As the congregation saw that preachers from another land could
not adjust to, or fit into
local conditions, and despite mutual efforts, preacher and
congregation felt strange to each
other. They decided to send one from their midst to (obtain)
theological education,
furnishing the finances for it. They found such a one in Arnold
Bachmann."(4)
"Four and one-half years the church was without a minister till
Amold Bachmann finished his
studies (at Tuebingen, Greifswald and Vienna) and returned."(5) Heinrich Pauls was recalled
from Germany to
ordain Arnold Bachmann on October 2, 1932. Of notable interest
is the fact that Pauls was a
leading light in the formation of the Mennonite World
Conference.(6)
The devastating effects of two world wars took a tragic toll of
Galician Mennonite lives and
property. In effect, all these families were forced to flee
their homeland, a fate endured by
many caught in the web of warfare. Following World War II,
resettlement efforts brought
many of these refugees to the USA, to Canada, and to Uruguay.
Many also resettled in what
was then West Germany. It was in Hichst am Odenwald that Arnold
Bachmann came to
reside with his family.
"Now he (Amold Bachmann) could put his plan into action to write
a book about the
Mennonites in Galizien as a continuation of Peter Bachmann's
book, Mennoniten
In Kleinpolen... In 1983 the job was done (gathering
genealogical data by many
volunteers) and Paster Amold Bachmann also fmished his book. A
year later the book was
published in 700 copies. A work was created which describes the
history of the Mennonites
in Galicia from 1784 till the parish ceased to exist in 1939. So
lives Amold Bachmann in
our memory not only as a dedicated pastor, but also as the author
of the family history of the
Galician Mennonites. His mortal remains were put to rest on
September 20, 1990, in
Heubach (Germany).(7)
Regarding traces of this heritage remaining to the present as
evidentiary testimony to their
historic plight the following account is highly significant to
those seriously studying this slice
of our past: "As we return, Ganna, a friendly woman motions to
us. We follow her down
steep stone steps into the cellar of the vintage house. There a
supporting beam reads, "Peter
Linscheid, 1827." It is her way of connecting to my past. Hers
is one of the few buildings
(in Einsiedel) that survived the battle zones of 166 years."(8)
As for Galician Mennonite descendants holding Canadian
citizenship, their numbers can be
traced mainly to post-WWII refugee status. Canada became their
new home in the late 40s
and early 50s. Addresses to which the author sends an annual
newsletter (Along
the Galician Grapevine) include Winnipeg, Manitoba;
St.Catherines and London,
Ontario; as well as Lethbridge, Alberta and Landis,
Saskatchewan(9)
Endnotes
1. Peter Bachmann. Mennoniten in
Kleinpolen (1934), 91, Cf. Also an unpublished summary
translation by Albert F.
Rupp, Los Angeles, CA, p.11.
2. Lola (Regier) Friesen. Kintzi.
The Story of
Theodore and Wilhelmine (Linscheid) Kintzi and their
Descendants
(North Newton, KS, 1986), B-1.
3. MIK, 39; Rupp, 242.
4. MIK, 62, Rupp, 351.
5. MIK, 62; Rupp, 351.
6. Cf. C.J. Dyck, "History of the Mennonite
World
Conference", Mennonite World Handbook
(Lombard, IL: MWC, 1978), 1-9.
7. Romauld Mueller in a funeral oration given
as a final
tribute to Deacon Amold Bachmann, the last pastor of the
Lemberg-Kiernica (Galicia)
Mennonite parish, 20 September 1990. Heubach, Germany.
8. Orpha V. Schrag, "Andreas D. Schrag:
Volhynia to Dakota",
Mennonite Family History Vol. XII, 3,
(July 1993),
107. The author and her husband traveled in Ukraine on a pilot
project to search for the
former Swiss-German villages located between Zhitomir and L'vov.
They visited 15 such
villages. The address of the Schrags is: 3511 Echo Hill Rd.,
Nashville, TN, 37215.
9. ArnoldBachmann. Galiziens
Mennoniten
im Wandel der Zeiten (Weierhof: Mennonitischer
Buchversand, 1984)
To order this book write to: Gary Waltner, D-67295 Weierhof, b.
Bolanden, Germany. The
newsletter can be ordered from Glen Linscheid, Box 194,
Butterfield, MN USA 56120. See
also Brian J. Lenius, "Galizien Genealogical Organizations",
Newsletter of the
Federation of East European Family History Societies,
Vol.3, No.1 (April,
1995), 9-13.
0 - 0 - 0
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