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Adeeb K
HALID
attracting the indigenous population to their schools – a formal curriculum was
only drawn up in 1907 and attendance was not compulsory – but it was never-
theless an innovation to offer conventional Muslim education.
The schools had a slow beginning, as officials found it difficult to convince
parents to send their sons to them. Local notables were pressed into service to
provide students, and it was not unheard of for notables to pay poor relations
to send their children instead. The situation changed gradually. Seven years
after the first Russian-native school opened, the Governor-General
A. B. Vrevskij (1834-1910) could write in a circular to all oblast governors:
“Russian-native schools occupy a steady place among the native population.
Local inhabitants deal with them without opposition and without fanatical
hostility.” But their numbers remained small, and the cost to the treasury was
“considerable” (23,000 roubles annually). For Vrevskij, the reasons were clear:
with the exception of a few merchants, natives “cannot understand the mean-
ing that learning Russian has for their children, what benefits knowledge of
the language can bring them.”
29
Vrevskij’s solution to this was, in effect, to
create demand for Russian as a way of making the schools more popular and
maximising the number of natives in Turkestan who learnt Russian. He asked
all governors to give preference in native appointments to those who knew
Russian.
30
The situation began to change after the turn of the century, as a new
generation of parents, faced with greater economic and political contact with
Russia and the world beyond, did come to appreciate the “benefits” that
knowledge of Russian could bring their children. There was rapid growth in the
numbers of Russian-native schools in the last decade of tsarist rule, especially
in Tashkent.
Russian-native schools contained all the contradictions of Russia’s colonial
policies in Turkestan. Even though the schools were meant to serve important
imperial goals, the state was loath to provide sufficient funding for them. In the
beginning, the authorities depended on local notables both for attracting stu-
dents to the schools and for paying for their operation. The first Russian-native
school opened in Tashkent in the house of the merchant Sayyid Karim-boy
31
;
notables served as patrons [
bljustiteli
]. State funds always represented a small
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