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Yuri Vella

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Yuri Vella, (1948 - 2013), full name Yurii Kilevich Aivaseda, known by his pseudonym Yuri Vella,[1] was a writer, poet, environmentalist and social activist of the Forest Nenets people from West-Siberia.

Biography

Yuri Vella was born in the Varyogan village in Siberia in 1948.[2]

He was a writer and poet writing in Forest Nenets language, Khanty language and in Russian language. [2]

In the 1990s, he moved with his family from the Varyogan village to the tundra of the Agan River to revive the traditional Nenets way of life and become a reindeer herder.[1]

He was a social activist - in 1990, he organised a protest on behalf of the Nenets people in the Varegansk area, Yamal, against the gas and oil industry expanding into the Yamal. The energy industry was destroying the environment, killing the reindeer, displacing and persecuting the indigenous people. The protest was recorded by Russian TV.[3]

In 1996, he created a small Taiga school to teach the traditional reindeer herding skills to Nenets children. The school was closed in 2009, when the attending children grew older and left for other education.[1][2]

In 2008, a documentary film about Vella, called "Yuri Vella's world" - the DER documentary, was created by Liivo Niglas. The preview of the film is the DER "docued" YouTube channel.

He died in September 2013, aged 65.

Bibliography

The following works of Vella were published in the 2010 anthology "Way of Kinship: Anthology of Native Siberian Literature", pages 78-93[2]

  • At the Bus Stop
  • Watching TV
  • On Things Eternal
  • To the Bear
  • Song of the Reindeer Breeder
  • Eternal Sky
  • The Little Shaman and Other Stories
  • Morning at the Lake
  • Fyodor the Hunter
  • News from Vatyegan Camp

Vella's poem "To the Bear" was also published in the anthology "Grrrrr: A Collection of Poems about Bears", published by Arctos Press, 2000, ISBN 9780965701518. [2]

References

  1. ^ a b c Erich Kasten; Tjeerd de Graaf. Sustaining Indigenous Knowledge: Learning Tools and Community Initiatives for Preserving Endangered Languages and Local Cultural Heritage. BoD – Books on Demand. p. 137. ISBN 9781452915463.
  2. ^ a b c d e Alexander Vaschenko; Claude Clayton Smith; N. Scott Momaday. The Way of Kinship: An Anthology of Native Siberian Literature. University of Minnesota Press. pp. 78–93. ISBN 9781452915463.
  3. ^ Mandelstam Balzer, Marjorie (1999). The Tenacity of Ethnicity: A Siberian Saga in Global Perspective. Princeton University Press. p. 152. ISBN 9780691006734. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)