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There is a small population of Germans inKyrgyzstan.
| Total population | |
|---|---|
| 7,886 (2022)[1] | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Kyrgyzstan,Talas,Bergtal,Chüy Valley | |
| Religion | |
| Christianity[2] |
During the 1800s, groups ofMennonites from Germanysettled throughout the Russian Empire; they began to come to the territory which is today Kyrgyzstan in the late 19th century. Many other Germans were brought to the country forcibly, as part of theStalin-era internal deportations.[3] The1979 Soviet census showed 101,057 Germans in theKirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic (2.9% of the population), while the1989 census showed 101,309 (2.4%).[4]
After Kyrgyzstan gained independence in 1991, there was a significant outflow of ethnic Germans to Germany, due to the relatively liberalGerman nationality law which granted citizenship to anyone with proof of German ancestry.[3] A 1993 survey found that 85% of the Germans in Kyrgyzstan intended to emigrate; among those, the most popular destination by far was Germany (80%), with Russia running a distant second at 6%.[5] By the time of Kyrgyzstan's 1999 census, just 21,471 (0.4% of the population) remained.[4] German diplomatic officials in Kyrgyzstan were quoted in 2009 as stating that number has declined even further over the following decade, to perhaps just 10,000.[3] This was supported by the 2009 census, which found just 9,487 Germans remaining (0.18% of the population).[6] However, there are signs that the exodus may be coming to an end. Facing difficulties integrating Russian-speaking Germans from theformer Soviet Union, the German government tightened their immigration requirements; furthermore, most ethnic Germans who hope to leave Kyrgyzstan have already done so. In 2007, only 196 Germans in Kyrgyzstan were granted immigration permits by the German embassy; that number fell further to 111 in 2008.[3] As of 2022, there were 7,886 Germans in Kyrgyzstan.[1]
The first German settlements in Kyrgyzstan were nearTalas:Nikolaipol, Keppental, Gradental, Orlovka and Dmitrovskoye. In the late 1920s, they moved towards theChüy Valley, in the vicinity of Frunze (nowBishkek), where they established a number of new village-suburbs, includingBergtal (Rotfront), Fridenfeld, and Luxemburg.[7][8] Others lived inKant andTokmok.[7] However, in the exodus of the 1990s, the German villages emptied out, and there are no longer any compact settlements of Germans in the country.[9]
The ethnic Germans of Kyrgyzstan tend to trace their roots to western parts of Germany near the border with theNetherlands, and as such tend to speak varieties ofLow German. However, many youth showlanguage shift towards Russian, which they use for communicating with peers of other ethnicities.[3][8] There is a Bishkek branch of theGoethe-Institut, which promotes German culture and the teaching of the German language; the local head of the Institut is herself an ethnic German born in Kyrgyzstan, who emigrated with her parents in 1978 but then returned to the country nearly three decades later to take up her present post.[7] However, the study of the German language as asecond language has been losing popularity even among ethnic German youth, as Chinese and English become of greater economic importance instead.[9]
In the southern city ofJalal-Abad, local ethnic Germans formed the Hope German Cultural Center in 1996.[8] Four Congresses of German Youth of Kyrgyzstan (съезд немецкой молодежи Киргизии) have been held in the country; however, the most recent, in 2010, attracted only 50 participants. The government of Germany provides some monetary support to German organisations in Kyrgyzstan.[9]
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