Life
‘Little Latvia’ lives on in Siberia
Villagers and visiting Latvians perform a traditional dance during a reception at a village club in Bobrovka, some 350km of Omsk July 31, 2019. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

BOBROVKA (Russia), Aug 7 — The people of the remote Siberian village of Bobrovka call it the "Little Latvia of the Taiga”, where Baltic traditions continue more than 100 years after settlers from the region first arrived.

At the end of the 19th century, several Latvian families moved 3,000 kilometres east to take up an offer of free land made as part of an agricultural reform.

Latvia was at the time a part of Tsarist Russia.


Villager Sergei Benke carries a bucket with milk in the village of Bobrovka, some 350km of Omsk July 31, 2019. — AFP pic

Today, many of the roughly 130 villagers still speak Latvian, though Russian is the language of day-to-day-life.

Some five hours drive from the nearest major Siberian city of Omsk, Bobrovka boasts wooden houses built in the traditional Latvian style and makes cheese based on Latvian recipes.

Almost every family owns the traditional Latvian dress, which they bring out for special occasions when songs and dances from the homeland are also performed.

At the end of last month, Baltic folk group Druvas Zemturi came to the tiny settlement as part of a project to support Latvian diasporas around the world. — AFP


Latvian women bath in a huge tub heated by a bonfire in the village of Bobrovka, some 350km of Omsk July 31, 2019. — AFP pic

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