Jouko Halmekoski Explained

Jouko Halmekoski
Birth Name:Jouko Halmekoski
Birth Date:27 May 1937
Birth Place:Asikkala, Finland
Occupation:Technical director, novelist
Genre:Non-fiction
Subject:Biography, war
Spouse:Leena Halmekoski

Jouko Antero Halmekoski (born 1937, in Asikkala[1]) is a Finnish writer who lives in Kalkkinen,[2] a village near by Asikkala's municipality with his wife Leena Halmekoski. Jouko worked most of his life as a technical director in Asko[3] furniture company. Halmekoski started his writing career rather late in life, at the age of 69. Jouko has also become known by a family chapel, "Temple of Peace",[4] he built near his childhood birthplace.

Production

Jouko Halmekoski started by writing an autobiography which consists of small stories about his life. In the book he also talks about his father, Hemmi, who was killed in the Winter War. Hemmi's body has never been found. Jouko's first book Sotaorvon vala was published in 2006.

Halmekoski's second books tells about his life and growing up as a war orphan. Book also examines how Finnish countryside and lifestyle has changed throughout the years. Kirkkonikkarin sydämellä was published in 2008.

For his latest work, Jouko has interviewed and collected memories of 24 Finnish orphan children sold in an auction "huutolaislapsi".[5] Huutolaislapsi (auction child) was a child (often orphans or a juveniles whose parents were not able to look after them) auctioned and sold as a slave in marketplaces all over Finland. This child practice started in 1840s ended around 1945. Jouko has collected auction children's stories in his book Orjamarkkinat – Huutolaislasten kohtaloita Suomessa' (Slave markets – auction children's destinies in Finland)'.

Publications

Other sources

Notes and References

  1. Isän ikävä. Sotaorvot kertovat, 2001, supplied Timo Malmi
  2. Web site: Kalkkinen . www.phnet.fi . 22 May 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20010124035800/http://www.phnet.fi/kylat/kalkkinen/ . 24 January 2001 . dead.
  3. [:fi:Asko]
  4. Web site: Kustannus Oy Uusi Tie . www.uusitie.com . 22 May 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110717181359/http://www.uusitie.com/fin/etusivu/uusin_lehti/?id=20&selectedNumber=92&selNews=607 . 17 July 2011 . dead.
  5. [:fi:Huutolainen]