At the end of the 19th century, German-speaking settlers from the
Russian Empire moved to
Central Asia to obtain new lands. Most these settlers were
Mennonites. The village of Bergtal, one of several originally German settlements in Kyrgyzstan, was established on the very rich black soil of the
Chüy Valley, at the foot of the
Tian Shan mountains, by
Baptist and Mennonite families who had emigrated from
East Frisia some three hundred years earlier to escape forced military service. At the end of the 19th century many moved to central Asia from the
Volga and
Crimea. In the first year of settlement, 41 simlins (earth dwellings) made of mud bricks with thatched roofs were built along the village street, which were about 2 metres deep into the ground and about 80 centimetres above the surface. The first school teachers gave their lessons in German in private homes. Even after the village school was built, German was still the language of instruction until 1938; after that, only Russian was allowed to be taught and pupils were forbidden to speak German. Parallel to the forced labour, other minorities from the Caucasus were forcibly resettled in the Red Front. After the co-operative founded in the 1990s went bankrupt in 2010 and many villagers lost their jobs, there was another wave of emigration of German families and around half of the remaining Germans emigrated to Germany. Today, only around 150 ethnic Germans still live in the village. However, "Rot-Front/Bergtal" is one of the few villages in Central Asia where a significant German minority still lives. Almost all of them have relatives in Germany, visit each other and have permission to travel to Germany. ==Today==