Alexei Kondratief

Alexei Kondratiev
mirrored from Wikipedia, August 2010

Alexei Kondratiev (1949–2010) was an author, linguist, and teacher of Celtic languages, Celtic folklore and Celtic culture. He taught the Irish language and Celtic history at the Irish Arts Center in Manhattan, New York from 1985 until his death on May 29, 2010. Nine editions of his book, The Apple Branch, were published in English and Spanish between 1998 and 2004. At various times, he taught all six of the "Living" Celtic languages.[1][2]

A long-time member of the Mythopoeic Society, Kondratiev was the Scholar Guest of Honor at the organization's Mythcon 33 convention in 2002, papers coordinator for Mythcon 39 in 2008, and maintained a book review column in its publication, Mythlore. In 2010, the society named a new award after Kondratiev, the Alexei Kondratiev Memorial Student Paper Award, to be presented for the first time at its Mythcon 41 convention in Dallas, July 9–12, 2010.[3]

He contributed significant portions of the text used on the website of the Celtic League's American Branch and book reviews for the organization's magazine, Keltoi.[4][5] On the File 770 science fiction fandom blog, Ken Gale reported that Kondratiev "spoke over 60 languages and was fluent in 13 to 20 of them."[2] In the Northeast Tolkien Society's tribute to Kondratiev, co-chairs Anthony S. Burdge and Jessica J. Burke reminisced about how he offered advice on the pronunciation of key Algonquin terms for a paper at Mythcon 37 in 2006, and his passion for the Polynesian culture and language at the Hawaii Mythcon.[6]

Kondratiev encouraged students to think of language as a tool to connect with and understand the culture of its people. The collection of languages he acquired included the Native American languages of Cherokee, Algonquin, Lakota, and Navaho.[7]

Contents

1 Early years
1.1 Education
2 Neopagan community
2.1 "Children of Memory"
2.2 Guest speaker and teacher
3 Gay life
4 Bird watcher
5 Bibliography
5.1 Books
5.2 Comic books
5.3 Significant articles and papers
5.4 Contributions to periodicals
5.5 Radio show guest
6 External links
7 References

Early years
Born on February 14, 1949[8] in New York, son of a Russian father and French mother, Kondratiev became fluent in the languages spoken by his parents: Russian, French and English. English was the later of these three languages; he did not speak it until he started school in New York.[9] He was the eldest of six children, with four sisters and one brother.[7]

Kondratiev grew up in both New York City and Bourgogne, France, as he traveled back and forth between the home of his parents in New York City and his grandmother's home in the Saone Valley. His interest in the Celtic culture began as a child, exploring the ancient Celtic ruins near his grandmother's home in eastern France. He began learning the Irish language from library books.[2][10]

In the 1960s, Kondratiev studied the Celtic languages and culture while traveling through Brittany, Wales and Ireland. He lived for awhile among native speakers of the Irish language on Inishmaan, the middle island of the Aran Islands group, where he acquired fluency in all six of the living Celtic languages. During that period, the Aran Islands were still home to elderly Gaeilge monoglots.[2][10][11][12]

Education
A graduate of New York's Columbia University (anthropology and linguistics), Kondratiev also studied Celtic philology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes in Paris.[1] His studies at both schools included archaeology.[7] During the 1970s, he took music courses at the Mannes College in New York.[11]

Neopagan community
A frequent participant and occasional speaker at science fiction conventions, Kondratiev met Judy Harrow at a science fiction convention in the early 1980s. During an interview at the Etheracon convention in Poughkeepsie in January 1993, Kondratiev commented about how Harrow practiced a "heritic" form of Gardnerian Wicca he found appealing. He attributed his gradual attraction to Neopaganism in the 1980s to his contact with science fiction fans who had become Neopagans. When he met Harrow, Kondratiev still considered himself a Christian, and continued to identify himself as such throughout the 1980s while attending Neopagan religious ceremonies. [9]

"Children of Memory"
Although he did not join Harrow's Proteus Coven, Kondratiev was initiated into the "Proteus tradition" by Night Rainbow. After his initiation, he joined Mnemosynides Coven. This group was founded by Len Rosenberg (known in the Neopagan community as "Black Lotus") in 1988. Mnemosynides, which means "Children of Memory," was named after the titaness of Greek mythology, Mnemosyne. Mnemosynides Coven belonged to the Protean-Gardnerian tradition of Wicca, which originated with Judy Harrow's Proteus Coven. Kondratiev remained a member of Mnemosynides until his death in 2010.[13][14]

At the time of his death, Kondratiev had been high priest of Mnemosynides for more than 20 years. In her "Memoriam" to the group's former high priest, published by Circle Sanctuary, Mnemosynides high priestess Lisa Bodo explained how he taught her the importance of "the bridge between Celtic Paganism and early Celtic Christianity." He did not consider his Neopagan and Christian beliefs to be in conflict, and "never renounced his Christianity."[7]

The members of Mnemosynides enjoyed a friendly relationship with the Kondratiev family. His mother invited the group to visit each year for Russian Orthodox Easter at the house she shared with Alexei and one of his sisters in Flushing. The goddess Brigid, according to Lisa Bodo, served as Kondratiev's link between his Christian upbringing and his Neopagan beliefs. His family, aware of this link, selected a grave site for Alexei by a life-sized statute of St. Brigid.[7]

Guest speaker and teacher
His knowledge of Celtic mythology and language made Kondratiev a frequent guest speaker at conventions, conferences and retreats, especially events with an emphasis on magic, Neopaganism or Wicca.[15] He taught classes and served as program director for the Esotericon convention (which focused on science fiction, fantasy, magick and Neopaganism) in New Jersey from 1985 until 1991, when the convention discontinued.[7] Then he served as a guest speaker for Ethericon, a similar convention which started operating in 1992 at Poughkeepsie, New York.[9] In more recent years, Kondratiev has been a guest at the Sacred Space and Ecumenicon conferences in Maryland, and the CWPN Harvest Gathering in Connecticut.[14] As a featured guest at the Chesapeake Pagan Summer Gathering (Maryland) in 2008, he recited 108 names of the Hindu goddess, Kali, at a puja led by Len Rosenberg.[16]

Gay life
An openly gay man, Alexei Kondratiev was often accompanied at conventions and conferences by his life partner, Len Rosenberg.[13] He participated in New York's Gay Pride March and other gay pride parades, and faithfully attended New York Bear Den, a gay men's group in Queens.[7]

Bird watcher
His friends remember Kondratiev as an avid bird watcher. Queens was one of his favorite locations for studying birds, as well as a center for cultural diversity. He commented that over 100 different species of birds could be observed in a single day while walking through the park in Queens.[7]

Bibliography

Books

Comic books Significant articles and papers Contributions to periodicals
Alexei Kondratiev also contributed articles about folkore, mythology and Celtic culture to the following publications.[20] Radio show guest References
  1. "Alexei Kondratiev - Irish Language, History of Celtic Revival". Irish Arts Center. Retrieved 2010-05-30
  2. "Alexei Kondratiev (1949–2010)" File770. Retrieved 2010-05-30
  3. “Student Paper Award Named In Honor of Alexei Kondratiev”. Mythopoeic Society (June 9, 2010). Retrieved 2010-06-10
  4. "The Art of the Celtic Calendar". Text by Mercy Paddock Van Vlack with Alexei Kondratiev. Celtic League American Branch website. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
  5. "The Quarterly Feasts". Text by Alexei Kondratiev. Celtic League American Branch website. Retrieved 2010-06-11
  6. Anthony S. Burdge and Jessica J. Burke (July 19, 2010). Remembering Alexei Kondratiev. The Northeast Tolkien Society. Retrieved 2010-08-16
  7. Lisa Bodo (August 2010). Alexei Kondratiev: In Memoriam. Circle Sanctuary. Retrieved 2010-08-19
  8. Alexei Kondratiev's Facebook profile states that his date of birth was February 14, 1949. Retrieved 2010-07-24.
  9. Ellen Evert Hopman and Lawrence Bond (2001). Being a pagan: Druids, wiccans, and witches today. pp. 21–25.
  10. "Alexei Kondrativ in New York" BBC article in srl abroad (December 2004). Retrieved 2010-06-01.
  11. "Multi-culturalism's great exemplar". The Keane Edge. See blog note posted by Oliver Gogarty (June 8, 2010) about Irish monoglots and music classes.
  12. See p. 89 of Devoted to You, for Kondratiev biography.
  13. Eternal Haunted Summer Pagan Songs and Tales. (October 3, 2009).
  14. "Speakers 2004". CWPN’s Harvest Gathering (September 2004).
  15. See biography on p. 89 of Devoted to You: Honoring Deity In Wiccan Practice.
  16. Myth Woodling (August 24, 2010). "Alexei Kondratiev, 1949-2010". Yet Another Wiccan Website. Retrieved 2010-08-24.
  17. Ken Gale (July 30, 2010). "Evolution-ary Thoughts". Nuff Said! comic book radio show. Retrieved 2010-08-17
  18. IMBAS Journal, (Samhain 1997). Retrieved 2010-05-31.
  19. See reprint of article at Proteus Coven website. Retrieved 2010-05-31
  20. Mythcon 33. Guest speaker biography. Mythopoeic Society (July 2002). Retrieved 2010-06-01
  21. Nuff Said! Guest List Nuff Said! radio show. Retrieved 2010-08-18

Memorials
"Yet another Wicca..." home page