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1 posted on 12/14/2003 5:25:06 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
There hasn't been a Cossack charge into battle in how long?
They were something to fear, and may be again.
This will be interesting.
2 posted on 12/14/2003 5:28:39 PM PST by Darksheare (For the crimes of Heresy of thought, Heresy of word, and Heresy of deed, this tagline shall burn!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe


3 posted on 12/14/2003 5:32:29 PM PST by Miss Marple
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Who are the Cossacks? Are they a people, a party, a military group? Are they part and parcel of the Russian people, or are they an independent nation, entitled to recognition as such?

Not long ago a traffic officer in Brooklyn gave a ticket to an offending motorist. As usual, the latter was full of indignation and, to express his disdain, called the officer a Cossack. The patrolman hauled the motorist into traffic court, where the judge immediately passed the following, sentence: "Present your apology to the officer for calling him a Cossack and pay a fine of five dollars for the traffic violation; otherwise — ten days in jail. To this judge and to the many others who have had no opportunity of learning about the Cossacks, the author dedicates this article.

It is doubtful if anyone could be found who doesn't think he knows something about the Cossacks. But it is just as doubtful if one could find two persons, not themselves Cossacks, whose conception about them is the same. The reason for such divergent views is that they are based on different sources of information, on different historical periods and events, on biased approaches and the prejudiced opinions of those who by chance have learned about one narrow phase or a short period of Cossack life.

Some people, such as the French, remember the Cossacks as the superb cavalry of the Russian Emperor, the conquerors of Napoleon, the unique troops who proved to be so unexpectedly kind and chivalrous during their occupation of Paris in 1814.

The Chinese still think of the Cossacks as the vanguard of the Russians, the horsemen who "carried the borders of the Russian Empire on the pommels of their saddles.

Military men throughout the world admire the Cossacks for their high "esprit de corps, for their valor, tenacity and habit of always performing acts beyond the call of duty, of always reaching for the impossible.

Students of the Imperial Period of Russia admire the Cossacks for their part in establishing the House of Romanoff as the rulers of Russia. On the other hand, Cossack leaders such as Razin and Pugachov were the patron saints of the liberals and revolutionists who fought against the Romanoffs,

To geographers the Cossacks are the intrepid explorers and discoverers who opened to civilization the vastness of Northern Asia, who discovered Kamchatka and the Bering Strait, who were the first to cross, that strait in modern times, who made the first permanent settlements in Alaska and along the West Coast of the North American continent, penetrating and establishing forts and settlements as far south as the present city of San Francisco.

Russian schoolboys of pre-revolutionary Russia learned about the Cossacks as the frontiersmen of the Russia State, who conquered and presented Siberia to the Czar of Russia and opened this vast land for subsequent colonization; to that schoolboy the Cossacks were for centuries protectors of the remote and long land frontier of Russia. To his counterpart of today, the schoolboy in the Soviet Union, the Cossacks are presented as class enemies of the true Bolsheviks, as the people who refused to accept the doctrines of Communism and the so-called benefits of the Soviet State and who, because of their "backwardness and stubbornness," had to be liquidated one and all.

Descendants of political refugees from the Czarist regime picture Cossacks as the trusted guardians of the Czars, brutal "gendarmes" too often employed by the Imperial Government in the suppression of popular protests, revolts and manifestations of a liberal character. For them the Cossacks were a military caste, part of the Russian people, and not the very best part either.

Immediate neighbors of the Cossacks, who were in a position to learn about the Cossacks at first hand by personal observation, knew them for their loyalty and patriotism, their eternal struggle for freedom, their heroic stand against Bolshevist aggression and tyranny, their free and easy way of living, and, finally, for their passionate love for their Cossack land. To them the Cossacks were a separate people, and their land the refuge for the oppressed.

To the Cossacks themselves there has never been any question as to their identity. They have their own national history, their own way of life, their traditions and usages, their particular linguistic originality, the proud knowledge of their part in shaping the destiny of humanity, and the inner consciousness that they are a separate ethnic and social group. Yet, at the same time, with a few fringe exceptions, the solid core of the Cossacks do not conceive of existing outside the Commonwealth of Peoples who in pre-revolutionary times composed the Russian Empire. The fringes are, on one hand, a very small group of Cossacks, for the most part former generals and high officials under the Czars, who deny a separate existence to the Cossacks and consider them just an odd and picturesque part of the Russian Army; at the other extreme is also a small, but highly vocal group of Cossacks, primarily of the younger generation, who claim that the Russians have always been the oppressors of the Cossacks, and that in the future all Cossacks shall and will live under the banner of the free and independent nation "Kazakia."

Although the author realizes the utter impossibility of giving in a few words a comprehensive history of the Cossacks., a description of their present social, political and economic situation, and the reasons and motives for their aspirations and claims to recognition, the author, himself a Cossack, presents the Cossacks to the general public as they see themselves, hoping in this brief sktech to correct some of the more common misconceptions about them.


More at http://www.armymuseum.ru/kaz1_e.html

7 posted on 12/14/2003 5:50:57 PM PST by ScuzzyTerminator
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To: Tailgunner Joe
We have never been afraid of anyone. It is genetically impossible for a Cossack to experience fear. We must protect the borders of the motherland .....Russia has called on its "untamed horsemen" - the Cossacks - to resurrect their historic role as defenders of its southern frontier.

I wonder if Russia would send us some Cossacks to protect our southern frontier?

14 posted on 12/14/2003 7:47:32 PM PST by WackyKat
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To: Tailgunner Joe
There are more than 600,000 registered Cossacks in Russia, many descendants of the mustachioed warriors of the Steppes who lived for centuries in semi-autonomous clans between the Black and Caspian seas.

Not quite, actually Cossak from central Ukraine to east Siberia.

17 posted on 12/14/2003 10:25:56 PM PST by RussianConservative (Hristos: the Light of the World)
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