Date: Tue, 3 Jul 2001 
From: Allison Henry < Allison.Henry@RRT.GOV.AU >
To: Molokans

From: 
Allison Henry
Country Research
Refugee Review Tribunal
Locked Bag No A3
Sydney South NSW 1235
Ph: (612) 9951 5919
Fax: (612) 9951 5889
Email: Allison.Henry@rrt.gov.au 

Subject: Information request
Our Ref: GGA14715
Date: 3 July 2001

Dear Sir or Madam,

My name is Allison Henry and I am a researcher for the Australian Refugee Review Tribunal in Sydney. The Refugee Review Tribunal is an independent Tribunal set up by legislation to undertake merit review of applications for refugee status of persons in Australia. Our website URL at <http://www.rrt.gov.au> contains more information about the Tribunal. One of the functions of the Country Research Unit is to obtain information to support the review function of the Tribunal.

I am currently researching the treatment of Molokans in Russia and Georgia and have found your website most useful. I was hoping that you may be able to assist with two questions: 

I hope you are able to help with these questions, as I have been unable to find evidence of any such incidents. Alternatively, could you please tell me if there is someone else who could help and give me their contact details (email, fax or telephone)?

If you have any questions about this request, please do not hesitate to contact me, either by email or on the telephone or fax numbers given above.

Please be aware that any information you provide may form part of the information used by the Tribunal to review applications for refugee status. Through use of the information, your identity and that of your organisation may be disclosed to applicants, their advisers, the Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, or otherwise become publicly available.

Thank you very much for your time and I hope you are able to provide some assistance.

Yours sincerely,

Allison Henry
Senior Country Researcher


Subject: Re: Information request
Date: Tue, 03 Jul 2001 
From: Andrei Conovaloff
To: Allison Henry <Allison.Henry@RRT.GOV.AU>

Allison Henry wrote:

> Are you aware of any incidents where Molokans have experienced adverse treatment in Georgia?

Probably no more than any other Russians in Georgia. I don't know that Molokans were singled out and abused.

In 1992, I heard frist hand from a Molokan refugee from Armenia that the youth would often tell the old Molokans who were in a bread line: "Old man, your bread is in Russia!" On the other hand, there are journalists like Grigorian who treasure the Molokans in Armenia.

My wife is a Molokan from Russia. She is from the Mineral Water's area of south Stavropol'skii krai. While we were dating in the summer of 1992, her neighbor saw on the TV news and reported to me that day about Molokan villages in the Arzerbaidjan-Karabakh being shelled, home damaged. Several Molokans interviews were shown about their fear and talk of having to abandon their homes and flee to Russia.

In 1996 in Los Angeles, I collected a first hand report from a Georgian woman, name in my notes someplace, who was applying for refugee status. In Tibilis, she owned the upper floor of the Molokan school a few blocks from the main train depot. The school was in operation in the early 1900s. Several Molokan publications are cited from that organization in 1905 and 1912, including the current dogma for the Constant Molokans. I suspect the building was confiscated during Stalin's time and converted to three apartments. The first floor apartment in 1996 was occupied by an old Molokan woman. The woman reported that within the first months that she was here in the US, her vacant apartment had been searched with walls and tiles ripped by soldiers looking for hidden money. She telephoned her downstairs neighbor, and was very concerned for the old woman's safety.

In 1997, I met a Russian Academy of Science anthropologist, Swetlana Inikova, who had just returned from visiting Molokans and Doukhobors in Georgia. She said she could not imagine how anyone would survive the poverty she saw.

> Are you aware of any incidents where Molokans have experienced adverse treatment in Russia?

Again, not any more than other Russian refugees fleeing from the new republics.

Allison, I'll post your note and my reply to Molokan NEWS and maybe someone will add more.

More than 25 Molokans have immigrated in the past 10 years to California from Armenia and an equal number to Australia. I am in Arizona, but Molokan NEWS readers in California may ask them and report back to you.

Most of the these immigrants arrived in the past 5 years to the Los Angeles area. The sponsors are American Jumpers who are reaching out only to help the Armenia Jumpers ("our people"), hoping to import fresh Russian speakers and as humanitarian aid for distant relatives. The Australian Molokans, nearly all Jumpers with whom you are probably in contact, have imported Molokan Jumpers also from Armenia for the same reasons. I know first hand from someone working in your Autralian immigration service that visas where approved for 40 Molokans from Armenia, but that quota was never filled by the Australian Molokan hosts--probably due to finances.


<> Date: Fri, 6 Jul 2001 
From: Allison Henry < Allison.Henry@RRT.GOV.AU >
To: 'Andrei Conovaloff'
Dear Andrew,

Thank you very much for your prompt and informative reply, your assistance is very much appreciated.

Regards,
Allison Henry


Subject: Re: Information request
Date: Thur, 05 Jul 2001 
From: Andrei Conovaloff
To: Allison Henry <Allison.Henry@RRT.GOV.AU>

I got an e-mail from a friend whose family is in Australia and is trying to invite Russian relatives. They already may be working with your office. She said that she's forwarding your request to several Australian Molokans.

Andrei