Kuzhuget Shoigu | |
Native Name Lang: | tyv |
Birth Name: | Shoygu Seree oglu Küzhüget |
Birth Date: | 24 September 1921 |
Birth Place: | , Tuvan People's Republic (now Republic of Tuva, Russia) |
Party: | Communist Party of the Soviet Union |
Children: | 4, including Larisa and Sergei |
Kuzhuget Sereyevich Shoigu (born Shoigu Sereyevich Kuzhuget; 24 September 1921 – 1 December 2010), was a Soviet Tuvan politician, journalist, and writer who served as a secretary of the Tuvan Regional Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, first Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Tuvan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, and a deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the Tuvan ASSR. He was also the father of Sergei Shoigu and Larisa Shoigu.
Shoygu Seree oglu Küzhüget was born on 24 September 1921 in the village of, in the recently established Tuvan People's Republic, to a family of nomadic herders.[1] Following the annexation of Tuva into the Soviet Union, Shoigu's name and surname would later be reversed by the NKVD due to the large size of the Küzhüget family; this change was not performed on other members of the Küzhüget family, such as Shoigu's brother .[2] [3]
During his early life, Shoigu spent much time herding cattle with his family on Lake Kara-Khol, as well as studying Tibetan and ancient Mongolian texts. Following the opening of a school in Kara-Khol, Shoigu attended and quickly developed strong knowledge of the Tuvan language.[1] He assisted teachers with schoolwork in Kara-Khol and also participated in literacy campaigns in Tuva.[4] Following the Soviet entry into World War II, Shoigu began working as a gold miner.[5]
Shoigu's political career began in journalism, with a six-year stint as editor of the Tuvan-language newspaper. He also served as head of the Tuvan archives. Following the Soviet annexation of Tuva, Shoigu began working within the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and became a secretary of the Tuvan Regional Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[6] During the 1950s he also met Aleksandra Kudryavtseva, whom he later married and bore his three children; Larisa (1953–2021), Sergei (born 1955), and Irina (born 1960). At that time he already married once and fathered a daughter named Svetlana.[7] [8]
During the 1980s, he served as Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Tuvan ASSR. After his son became Minister of Emergency Situations, Kuzhuget achieved attention from outside of Tuva. He would later write two books (The Vulture's Black Feathers in 2001 and Tannu-Tuva: Land of Lakes and Blue Rivers in 2004) on the history of Tuva during his lifetime.[8] He also co-wrote the seven-book anthology Uriankhai: Tyva depter on Tuvan history with K. D. Arakchaa.[9]
Kuzhuget Shoigu died at the age of 89 on 1 December 2010. He was buried two days later in a Moscow funeral attended by his family and politicians throughout Russia. At a speech during his funeral, Sholban Kara-ool, head of the Republic of Tuva, credited Shoigu for his role in the development of Tuva and the establishment of "patriotic and moral education".[5] In 2014, a school in his native village of Kara-Khol was posthumously renamed after him.[1]