How did the pre-revolutionary Russian community in Australia live?

Emeritus Professor Kevin Windle and Dr Elena Govor

Emeritus Professor Kevin Windle and Dr Elena Govor Credit: Image: Evana Ho/ANU

Australian Scholarly Publishing published a book by Elena Govor and Kevin Winlde, Voices in the Wilderness. The book is based on the stories of representatives of the Russian-speaking community of Australia who disagreed with the tsarist regime and published newspapers in Russian at the beginning of the twentieth century.


Between 1912 and 1919 seven weekly Russian newspapers were published in Australia. Today they are little known and the small community which produced them is largely forgotten.

These newspapers show us a body of immigrants struggling to establish themselves in what some had viewed as a ‘working man’s paradise’. Educated radicals and newly literate workers of various political persuasions expressed their opinions, along with representatives of the Russian Empire’s different ethnic groups, feeling increasingly that they were ‘voices crying in the wilderness’.

The rich material presented in this digest is an unrivalled source of information on Russian settlement in Australia and the broader social history at a critical historical moment

Listen to the interview with Elena Govor, a researcher at the Australian National University in Canberra.

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