A REVIEW OF
The
Conquest of a Continent
Siberia & The Russians
by W. Bruce Lincoln, Random House,
1994
Siberia and Canada have
much in common by way of geography and history. Europeans were first
attracted to both regions by the lustrous furs to be taken in the taiga,
tundra and boreal forests. In each case, trappers and traders soon
proved it possible to deplete animal populations, even in seemingly
limitless regions, unless attention was paid to conservation. In the
ensuing centuries, prospectors in both countries found precious minerals,
heavy metals, and petroleum in the most inhospitable of locations,
spurring engineers to learn about permafrost, meltwater bogs, and shifting
ice floes.
In both countries, colonizers have overwhelmingly
clustered in a narrow band along the southern borders. Finally, the
ways of the peoples who have made the northern lands their homes for
millenia have been generally ignored by the newcomers.
If Siberians and Canadians have a great deal
to learn from each other, there was little opportunity for contact
for most of this century. But in the last few years, many Canadian
companies with experience in resource extraction and arctic construction
techniques have been welcomed in Siberia, while travelling delegations
of native peoples have shared perspectives on preserving their cultures
in an industrial age.
With these new opportunities for interchange,
a familiarity with Siberia's history is essential to many people. W.
Bruce Lincoln's new book tells part of this story ably, although Lincoln
gives us only fleeting glimpses of the native peoples of Siberia, and
almost no sense of how their cultures fare today or how they have contributed
to Siberia's history.
Lincoln's opening sentence provides a controversial
if succinct interpretation of history: "Nations are born of battle,
and conquest makes them great." The gory opening chapters on the
Mongol armies, who exited history's centre stage as quickly as they
entered, may lead some readers to conclude that the book will equal
the average action movie in its insights into the human condition.
Deeper into the book, however, Lincoln rounds
out the story, even though the tales for the most part remain chilling.
We learn about the slow progress of Siberian industry, as hundreds
of thousands of workers carve railways through mountains and dig mineshafts
in rock-hard permafrost. Lincoln weaves together many threads of political
economy, to illustrate how the maneuverings of empire-building politicians
in Europe often resulted in the starvation of prisoners thousands of
miles away.
With only a few brief exceptions, each brutal
regime seemed to beget an even more brutal regime, until the Bolsheviks,
desperate to create an industrial colossus out of the reach of rival
armies, sacrificed forced labourers by the hundreds of thousands. In
the process, land and people suffered equally: "Siberia's Soviet
masters had transformed the fragile ecology of the tundra and taiga
. . . into some of the most noxious surroundings on earth." While
Russia's most recent rulers are seeking technical help to make Siberian
industry more productive, the whole world, and especially the circumpolar
countries, have an interest in helping Siberian industry clean up its
act.
Lincoln's book relates hundreds of tales of
conquest in Siberia, but very little that could pass for greatness.
With a lot of luck, perhaps the greatness will yet come.
Review
originally published in the 150th Anniversary Edition of the Globe & Mail,
March 5, 1994.