Other Information:
Researchers will note that the pages in this collection are numbered. The numbering system was largely honored in processing the collection. Where it could not be honored, photocopies or notes have been inserted to maintain original order.
Walter Quiring was born Jakob Quiring in the Village of Friedensliebe, Ukraine on July 7, 1893. He fled the Soviet Union for Germany in 1921 with his wife, Maria Friesen, and son, Manfred.
He received a PhD from the University of Munich in 1928 and taught at the Schlossschule at Salem on Bodensee from 1927-1934. During that time, he changed his first name to Walter.
From 1934 to 1936, Quiring conducted research on Mennonite colonies in Paraguay and Brazil. Upon his return to Germany, he served as a department leader in the Deutsche Auslandinstitut in Stuttgart.
He was drafted into the German army in 1941 as a translator and journalist and ended the war as a British prisoner. In 1950, he emigrated to Canada. There he edited various German language publications, including "Mennonitische Welt" (1950-1953) and "Der Bote" (1955-1963).
From 1963 to 1965, he served as Professor of German and Slavic languages at United College, Winnepeg.
Quiring's publications include: "Deutsche erschliessen den Chaco" (1936), "Russlanddeutsche suchen eine Heimat" (1938), "Im Schweisse deines Angesichts" (1953), "Mennonites in Canada" (1961), and "Als ihre Zeit erfuellt war" (1964).
In 1920 Benjamin H. Unruh participated in a Studien-Kommission, sent out by the Mennonites of Russia to report on their conditions and suffering to the Mennonites in the United States. This Kommission consisted of B. H. Unruh and A. A. Friesen of Halbstadt, K. H. Warkentin from Waldheim , and John Esau of Ekaterinosla: all from the Ukraine. Unruh’s life work was served in the interests of his Russian Mennonite brethren in emigration and resettlement, working in this respect directly as commissioner for the Canadian Mennonite Board of Colonization for the immigration to Canada 1921-25 and later, and for the Mennonite Central Committee in immigration to Paraguay 1930-33.
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ArchonInternalCollectionID:294
Part I is a manuscript entitled “Gott hört uns nicht mehr”. This appears to be a first-person, historical novel about Mennonites in the “Gulag” in the Soviet Union in the 1930s. Previously, this item was cataloged in the MLA's library, accession #17547, acquired in 1972.
Part II is a manuscript entitled “Wenn Gott die Weiche stellt”. This is another historical novel, about Mennonite refugees from the Soviet Union. This item was also cataloged in the MLA's library collection, accession #17462, acquired in 1972.
Part III is a collection of source documents and notes entitled “Material zur Geschichte der Mennoniten in Brasilien”. Most of the material covers the late 1940s and early 1950s. As one can see, not all of the material is about Brazil. These papers were at the Mennonite Church USA Archives–Goshen until 2011; the North Newton archives had photocopies. The arrangement of the material here corresponds as closely as possible to Quiring's own outline for it. Folder 22 is a manuscript by Johann Sjouke Postma entitled “Fernheim, Fernes Heim?”. Folders 26-29 are not part of Quiring's outline. The MLA has 909 individually numbered pages in this section.
Part IV is a rough draft entitled “Witmarsum am Krauel”. This is a more polished draft rather than a collection of documents as in Part III. These are arranged according to Quiring's outline. Folder 45 is not part of Quiring's outline and just contains notes, sources, and bibliography.
Part V is entitled “Material zur Geschichte der Auflösung der Ansiedlung Witmarsum in Santa Catarina”. This is again a collection of source documents and notes, from the late 1940s and early 1950s. These items are photographic copies; that is, copies on photographic paper, not xerographic copies. The present location of the originals [1989] is unknown. The arrangement is according to Quiring's outline, but Roman numeral XIX from his outline, “Verschiedenes,” is missing. These deteriorating pages have been scanned [2011], in folder archives/ms_139.
Part VI is a draft entitled “Canadische Mennoniten 1875-1975". The termination date of 1975 seems somewhat strange since the manuscript was acquired by the MLA in 1972 and was cataloged as part of the MLA's library collection, accession #17461. The manuscript may have been modified since 1972. This is once again a draft rather than a collection of documents. These are original materials, not photocopies. The message of this rather rough draft is a bitter denunciation of contemporary Canadian Mennonitism for being different from the Mennonitism of Quiring's childhood. The contents bear only a slight resemblance to Quiring's accompanying outline and may not be in original order.
Part VII consists of two folders of miscellaneous drafts of articles by Quiring and several of his writings that had earlier been cataloged in the MLA library holdings.
purchased from Quiring by Cornelius Krahn in 1971 or 1972
some papers were at Goshen archives until 2011
This material is open to the public.
Researchers are responsible for using in accordance with 17 U.S.C. Copyright owned by the Mennonite Church USA Archives.
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