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Siberia’s Texas Preserving tradition in Russia’s biggest oil-rich region. A photo series

Source: Meduza
Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Khanty-Mansiysk is an oil-rich and hilly region in central Russia. About 1.5 million people populate this vast area the size of France. The English-language newspaper Siberian Times has called it “the Siberian equivalent of Texas.” Over half of Russia’s oil is produced here. Today, the capital of the region (also called Khanty-Mansiysk) is a booming oil town with futuristic architecture, downhill ski slopes and world-class cross-country ski tracks.

The area was historically populated mostly by the Khanty and Mansi peoples, as well as other ethnic groups. Under Soviet rule, the government developed parts of the region, introduced standardized education in Russian-language schools, and offered replacements for traditional nomadic homes with housing in newly erected villages. Local Khanty and Mansi languages, which are related to Hungarian, are now spoken by few.

Photographer Fyodor Telkov visited the village of Varyogan, where just 660 people live, all composing five very large Khanty families, for whom the traditional Khanty lifestyle remains central.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Vitaliy Kazamkin (47 years old) and his son Anton (6 years old). A Khanty family from the “Bear clan.” The Kazamkins own two houses in the village, and their children attend the local school, but the family spends most of its time in nomadic homes in the taiga. Vitaliy Kazamkin established a small tourist business there, for visitors who wish to stay in traditional Khanty houses.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Each Khanty family living the in the taiga has three nomadic homes: one for the winter, one for the spring, and one for the summer. Moving from one to another depends on the season, on the deer herd, on deer feed, and so on. Each settlement has a house, a deer enclosure, cellars, and sledges for transportation. Each family member owns their own deer within the bigger family herd.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

The Khanty hunt for food, not for recreation. They often carry a hunting rifle. Poaching and illegal recreational hunting are harmful for the traditional Khanty way of life.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Khanty are careful hunters and always make sure that the bird population does not sink below certain levels, in order to sustain a balance in the environment and to be sure there will be more food tomorrow.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Khanty spirituality is a deeply personal sphere. The Khanty people do not readily speak about their traditional beliefs, as people were persecuted for this under Soviet rule. Shamans were often punished for their religious activities in the USSR.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Ekaterina Kazamkina (60 years old). A Khanty woman from the “Еlk clan.”

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Fish is a staple food for the Khanty. The number of fish in the region’s rivers and lakes is essential for upholding traditional ways of life.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Khanty cuisine is based on efficiency and simplicity of food preparation. Khanty eat a lot of boiled fish, boiled meat, or frozen raw meat.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Traditionally, women have a lot of responsibilities; among them are cooking, preparing firewood, making clothes, rearing children.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Maxim Kazamkin (9 years old), a Khanty of the “Bear clan.” A “Labaz” is a house built on posts high off the ground in order to keep out wild animals. This small building holds tools, household goods, clothes, meat, and various spiritual items. The Labaz and the area around it are considered holy, and one cannot enter or take anything from it after sundown.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Deer provide meat, furs, transportation, decoration, and bait for other animals.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Oil extraction has pushed Khanty people out of their traditional areas of settlement. Vitaly explains that Khanty people always lived near rivers in order to go fishing, and there are usually more fish in areas with oil reserves. This is due to the fact that oil reserves provide heat for the water in the wintertime, and thus offer more oxygen to fish under the ice. As a result, oil extraction facilities pop in places of importance for the Khanty.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Khanty traditionally predict the weather by looking at the stars, are familiar with animal tracks, and boast knowledge of how certain animals and fish behave in the wild.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Raisa Pakacheva (46 years old), from the “Beaver clan.”

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

Every nomadic home has an electric facility which operates on diesel fuel. The Kazamkin family usually uses electricity from sundown to about 8 PM. To save fuel, the family uses dull light from kerosene lamps on dark nights.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

When new oil reserves are discovered and oil extraction facilities are built, this results in shrinking territory for bears to roam. A bear migration pathway from the north to the south goes right through the Kazamkins’ nomadic settlements, where bears find easy prey – the Kazamkins’ deer. The family tries to protect its herd from these predators.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

A typical Khanty house is a low wooden structure with small doors. There is a common room with a small storage area in the front, two windows and a wooden countertop. Before, the roofs of these houses were typically covered with moss, or sometimes with deerskin in the winter and tree bark in the summer.

Photo: Fyodor Telkov

From left to right: Anton Kazamkin of the Khanty people (6 years old), Nelya Pyak of the Nenets people (41 years old), Vitaly Kazamkin of the Khanty people (41 years old). Khanty people believe that the souls of ancestors are reborn in younger generations; therefore children are respected and loved in Khanty families.

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