Быть чеченцем: Мир и война глазами школьников | страница 152
The contestants were asked to make a real research: to question the relatives and acquaintances, to examine documents, photos from the family albums or local museums, to study relevant literature. As a rule, the schoolchildren were guided by the schoolteachers or the heads of the local history groups.
The principle sponsors of the competition are: the European Union (Brussels), the Open Russia Regional NGO (Russian Federation), the Ford Foundation (USA), the Heinrich-Boll-Foundation (Germany), the Remembrance, Responsibility, and the Future Foundation (Germany). The contest was also supported by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (Geneva), the Open Society Institute (Soros Foundation-Russia), the Friedrich Naumann Foundation (Germany), the Foundation for Social, Economic, and Intellectual Programs (Russian Federation), the Koerber Foundation (Germany), the International Democracy Foundation (Russian Federation), Znanie — sila (Knowledge is Power) magazine (Russian Federation). This competition is part of Eustory, a network of independent history research competitions for school-level students.
In 2004, 2417 works took part in the competition. Thanks to the work of the competition Caucasian Knot coordinator in Grozny, for the first time since the foundation of the competition 15 5 works were received from Chechnya, four of which were awarded by the special prizes of the Caucasian Knot information and analytic web site. This collection includes 27 works which reflect their author's personal experience, the history of their families and the fates of different people against the background of the Chechen history.
The collection has four sections. Section One As Long As I'm Alive… includes papers in which the Chechen schoolchildren, who never knew peaceful life since their birth, describe what they have lived through. These are stories of their flight from Grozny, stories about themselves and their families who tried to escape bombings, and descriptions of family losses. Their leitmotif is the longing for a normal human life.
Section Two Where I Shall Bring My Children Together, includes family histories. Schoolchildren write down family lore about the Chechens who fought in the Russian army during World War I and took part in the revolution. Many of their family members fell victims to the Great Terror. However, the family memory's lynchpin is the 1944 deportation of more than half a million of Chechens to Kazakhstan. The tragic events of the past decade fortify this memory.