Vasily Blakitny

Vasily Mikhailovich Blakitny (real name: Yellansky) (Russian: Василий Михайлович Блскитный, real name: Елланский) (1891-4 December 1925) was a Ukrainian revolutionary and poet.

Biography

Born in Chernihiv (Chernigov) province of north Ukraine, the son of a village priest, Blakitny was educated in a village school and in a seminary, then an ecclesiastical seminary, and the Kiev University. While he was at seminary, he joined an underground Ukrainian nationalist circle. At university, he joined the Ukrainian Socialist Revolutionary Party. In 1911-1917, he worked for youth organisations, under police supervision. After the February Revolution, in 1917, he was an active in the Socialist Revolutionary party in Chernihiv, and was one of the leaders called the Left Bank (Levoberezhtsev).The levoberezhtsi supported the Bolshevik Revolution and alliance with Soviet Russia. After the Ukrainian Rada had been driven out of Kiev by the red army, Blakitny worked with the Kiev soviet, but during the German occupation, in 1918, he was arrested and spent several months in Lukyanivska Prison. While he was in prison, the levoberezhtsi gained control of the Central Committee of the Ukrainian SR party, and disbanded the party, on the grounds that it was manifestly counter-revolutionary, and merged with the Borotbists. Blakitny was elected a member of the Central Committee of the new organisation. After his release from prison, he worked underground in Odessa, Mykolaiv, and Poltava, where he was one of the leaders of the resistance to German rule. After a failed attempt to establish soviet rule in Poltava, he was imprisoned by Ukrainian nationalists loyal to Symon Petliura, but was fdreed by the arrival of the Red Army. He moved to Kiev, where he was elected to the Central Executive Committee of the Ukraine soviets, and appointed editor of the newspaper Borotba. He was one of the leaders of the Borotbist faction who advocating merging with the Ukraine communist party. In March 1920, he was elected a member of the Central Committee of the Ukraine CP, and later head of the Ukraine publishing house. As a poet, using the pseudonym Ellan, he was hailed as a pioneer of Ukrainian proletarian literature. He died of heart disease, in Kharkiv, on 4 December 1925. [1]

References

  1. Shmidt, O.Yu., (chief editor), Bukharin. N.I. et al (eds) (1927). Большая советская энциклопедия volume 6. Moscow. pp. 472–3.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)


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