Learn About Kalmyk Community News & Events
Concerts & Festivals
Experience the vibrant energy of Kalmyk cultural events through our curated seasonal concerts and folk festivals. We celebrate the rich Oirat Mongolian heritage with live performances of traditional songs, folk dance, and epic storytelling. These community gatherings serve as a vital platform for heritage promotion, bringing the spirit of the steppe to the global diaspora and inviting everyone to participate in our living history.
Lessons & Courses
Our cultural education programs offer a diverse curriculum designed for lifelong learning and personal development. From Kalmyk music lessons and traditional dance classes for both adults and kids to innovative emotional intelligence for children and youth sports programs, we provide holistic growth opportunities. Our courses empower the next generation with the tools of their heritage and the skills of the future, ensuring a strong foundation for both community and character.
Buddhist Events
As the only indigenous Buddhist population in Europe, we offer a unique sanctuary for spiritual development and Buddhist teachings. Our calendar includes authentic Buddhist rituals, meditation sessions, and scholarly lectures led by esteemed masters. These religious community events provide a sacred space for contemplation, mindfulness, and the preservation of Kalmyk Buddhist traditions, welcoming practitioners and seekers of all backgrounds.
Community news
Singing the Steppe: Kalmyk music beyond the homeland
From Zayton to New York, Vol. XI presents the living musical traditions of the Kalmyk people — descendants of the Western Mongol Oirats whose migrations since the fifteenth century have shaped a cultural landscape spanning Russia, Mongolia, China, and Central Asia. Today, with the Kalmyk language classified as endangered by UNESCO, the preservation of musical heritage carries particular urgency.
This concert centers on two pillars of Kalmyk sonic identity. The dombra, a two-stringed plucked lute with a triangular body and resonant soundboard, has historically accompanied epic storytelling, ritual, and communal gatherings — carried by jangarchi, the singers of the heroic Jangar cycle. Throat singing, a technique in which a single vocalist produces multiple simultaneous pitches, connects the Kalmyk tradition to a broader sonic world shared across Mongol and Central Asian cultures. Alongside these, the program features vocal traditions spanning ut dun ("long songs"), children's folk songs, festival songs for the Kalmyk New Year, wedding ballads with ritual dance, and pastoral invocations of the steppe.
What makes this concert distinctive is its cast: performers ages 6 to over 70, drawn from Russia, Inner Mongolia, and the United States, including a laureate of the Republic of Kalmykia, a former soloist of the State Symphony Orchestra of Kalmykia, and young students learning dombra and voice in the New York area. Together they demonstrate how Kalmyk music functions as a living medium of lineage, memory, and cultural continuity — not preserved under glass, but actively transmitted across generations and geographies.
Performed by artists of the Kalmyk Heritage Center. Co-presented by See See Records and the Center for Traditional Music and Dance (CTMD) .
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