Marcelė Kubiliūtė | |
Birth Date: | 28 July 1898 |
Birth Place: | , Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Vilnius, Lithuanian SSR |
Burial Place: | Rasos Cemetery |
Occupation: | Spy, activist |
Boards: | Union for the Liberation of Vilnius |
Employer: | Ministry of Foreign Affairs |
Alma Mater: | Vytautas Magnus University |
Relatives: | (brother) |
Awards: | Order of the Cross of Vytis Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas Order of Vytautas the Great |
Marcelė Kubiliūtė (28 July 1898 - 13 June 1963) was a Lithuanian spy and activist. She is the only Lithuanian woman awarded all major Lithuanian orders. Virtually unknown until her memoirs were published in 1999, she is now recognized as a "legendary" figure in the Lithuanian intelligence services.
In 1912, Kubiliūtė moved to Vilnius where she worked at the editorial offices of the Lithuanian newspaper Viltis published by Antanas Smetona. During World War I, she evacuated to Voronezh and later Saint Petersburg where she graduated from a gymnasium. She returned to Vilnius in 1918. She edited Lithuanian periodicals, organized aid to injured and imprisoned Lithuanian soldiers, and became a spy for the Lithuanian government. She gathered information on Polish military forces and played a key role in obtaining documents of the Polish Military Organization that helped thwart the planned coup in Lithuania in September 1919. She had to flee to Kaunas as Polish counterintelligence was about to arrest her.
In interwar Lithuania, she continued to work for the Lithuanian intelligence an matters concerning Lithuanians in the disputed Vilnius Region. In 1925, she moved to work at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs where she dealt with cyphers and library of secret documents. She was an active member of the Lithuanian Riflemen's Union and the Union for the Liberation of Vilnius. During World War II, she maintained contacts with the Lithuanian Activist Front and joined the underground . She helped many evading persecutions by the Nazis.
She was arrested by the NKVD in August 1945 and sentenced to five years of exile. Upon her return to Lithuania in 1949, she worked as a bookkeeper in Tauragė. The KGB continued to monitor her until her health deteriorated in 1958 due to bone tuberculosis and breast cancer. After extensive treatments, she died in 1963.
Kubiliūtė was born on 28 July 1898 in near Panemunėlis in the present-day northern Lithuania. Her family were well off peasants who participated in the distribution of the banned Lithuanian press. She was first educated by the local Catholic priest who was also active in Lithuanian cultural life. She later attended a primary school in Panemunėlis.
In 1912, her elder brother (elected to the first Russian State Duma) took her to Vilnius where she attended an evening school and worked at the editorial offices of the Lithuanian newspaper Viltis published by Antanas Smetona. She was invited by priest to emigrate to the United States, but her mother fell ill and she returned to her native Tindžiuliai to care for her.
In 1915, as the German Imperial Army approached Vilnius, Kubiliūtė evacuated together with other Lithuanian students to Voronezh in Russia. She became ill, and her brother Juozas took her to Saint Petersburg in 1916. He died in March 1917. His funeral was officiated by Juozas Tumas-Vaižgantas. Kubiliūtė developed feelings for poet Julius Janonis who supported the Bolsheviks. However, he was ill with tuberculosis and committed suicide in May 1917. She then became engaged to a doctor, but he was killed in the Russian Civil War. Nevertheless, Kubiliūtė managed to graduate from a gymnasium and bookkeeping courses by fall 1918.
Kubiliūtė returned to Lithuania at the end of 1918. She moved to Vilnius where she lived in a student dormitory that was organized by Emilija Vileišienė. Kubiliūtė found a job at a bank and later at the editorial offices of Lithuanian periodicals and . After work, she organized classes for children of Lithuanian workers. The classes were attended by 25 children.
In late 1918, lieutenant Juozas Matusaitis recruited Kubiliūtė to work for the Lithuanian intelligence. Vilnius changed hands frequently: Soviets occupied it at the start of the Lithuanian–Soviet War in January 1919, but Poland captured it in April 1919 during the Polish–Soviet War. Kubiliūtė remained in the city and gathered information on Polish forces, military transports, military press, etc. and relayed it to the Lithuanian government in Kaunas. According to her memoirs, her sources included Polish major Antoni Jankowski with whom she had a long intimate relationship (no officer by such name is known in the Polish military).
In August 1919, the Polish Military Organization (PMO) planned a coup in Lithuania in hopes of installing a new pro-Polish government. The Lithuanian government learned about the coup and arrested some 200 Polish activists, but did not have specific information about PMO or its members. Aldona Čarneckaitė (editor of published by Mykolas Biržiška, secretary of Jonas Basanavičius, and sister of) convinced Petras Vrubliauskas (Piotr Wróblewski), PMO deputy commander in Vilnius, to transfer PMO documents to the Lithuanians. On 21 September 1919, Kubiliūtė obtained the documents and transferred key files to Ignas Jonynas and Augustinas Voldemaras who at the time visited Vilnius for diplomatic missions. This allowed the Lithuanian intelligence service to liquidate PMO in Lithuania.
Kubiliūtė organized aid to injured or imprisoned Lithuanians as well as the elderly and the orphans. She buried 19 Lithuanian soldiers in Rasos Cemetery. Kubiliūtė helped several Lithuanians escape prison in October 1920 by bringing alcohol to Polish guards. She was also active in defending Lithuanian-language schools in Vilnius Region and organizing protests and boycott of the January 1922 election to the Sejm of Central Lithuania.
As Polish counterintelligence offered a bounty of 5,000 Polish złoty, Kubiliūtė had to move from Vilnius (now part of the Second Polish Republic) to Kaunas. In 1923, began studying history at Vytautas Magnus University (she graduated only in 1936).
She continued to work for the Lithuanian intelligence focusing on issues concerning Lithuanians in the Vilnius Region. The Lithuanian government supported various Lithuanian organizations in the area, but had no official way of communicating with them. Kubiliūtė acted as a secret carrier of large sums of cash and various documents that were secretly exchanged at the Poland–Lithuania border. In 1925, she moved to work at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. She worked with cyphers and organized ministry's secret archive. In 1931, she was promoted to secretary in 1931 and to first secretary in 1939. Her direct supervisors were Bronius Kazys Balutis and Juozas Urbšys.
Kubiliūtė was also active in various Lithuanian organizations. She joined the Lithuanian Riflemen's Union in 1920 and organized its secret chapter in Vilnius in 1929. However, this claim is disputed. She also joined the Union for the Liberation of Vilnius and was elected to its central committee. She was a member of the Society for the Care of Lithuanian Prisoners (Lithuanian: Lietuvos kalinių globos draugija) and personally delivered parcels to Kaunas Prison. She was also active in the Lithuanian Girl Scouts.
When Lithuania regained Vilnius as a result of the Soviet–Lithuanian Mutual Assistance Treaty, Kubiliūtė returned to Vilnius. After the Soviet occupation of Lithuania in June 1940, she lost her job at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs but managed to get a job at the Peoples' Commissariat for Social Welfare. In spring 1941, she became secretary at the history section of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences.
Already in 1941, she attracted attention from the NKVD which suspected that Kubiliūtė gathered information from the Peoples' Commissariat and relayed it to the Lithuanian Activist Front. NKVD intended to arrest her, but reportedly she was warned by her boss and managed to evade the security agents. Kubiliūtė joined the anti-Soviet June Uprising at the start of the German invasion of the Soviet Union. She was a member of the rebel headquarters in Vilnius. Once Germans disbanded rebel organizations, she obtained a job at a library located in Vileišis Palace (one of the subsidiary libraries of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences), but continued underground activities. She became an active member of the underground in August 1942. Together with others, she distributed union's publications and established a women's section in January 1943.
Kubiliūtė helped various individuals persecuted by the Nazis. She helped, (husband of Meilė Lukšienė), avoid the persecutions. She organized aid to Lithuanian intellectuals, including Vladas Jurgutis, deported to the Stutthof concentration camp. She also assisted with helping Irena Veisaitė who had escaped the Vilna Ghetto.
Unlike many other Lithuanian activists, Kubiliūtė did not retreat west ahead of the approaching Red Army. After the second Soviet occupation of Lithuania in 1944, Kubiliūtė continued working at the library. On 17 August 1944, she was arrested by the NKVD. Over the period of nine months, she was interrogated 23 times. The interrogations were mainly conducted at night and involved torture. On 7 July 1946, the Special Council of the NKVD sentenced her to 5 years in exile according to the Article 58 (RSFSR Penal Code).
She was first deported to in the Tobolsky District. She was later transferred to Tobolsk for medical treatments and then to the Atbasar District in Kazakhstan where she worked sewing furs. She was released in August 1949. Kubiliūtė departed to Lithuania where she was initially sheltered by Jonas Biliūnas' widow, Julija Biliūnienė. She quickly moved to Tauragė where she worked as a bookkeeper. She was monitored by the KGB under suspicion that she continued to maintain contacts with interwar public figures and activists (particularly with the historian Ignas Jonynas, former Prime Minister Leonas Bistras, last Minister of Foreign Affairs Juozas Urbšys, widow of General Kazys Ladiga, and others). In KGB documents, she was classified as an agent of the Germans and later of the British.
She returned to Vilnius in 1956. She lived with the widow of Liudas Gira in Žvėrynas and worked at a children's hospital. The KGB considered recruiting her as an agent, but her health was failing. She was ill with bone tuberculosis and breast cancer. She was treated at different hospitals and sanatoriums since summer 1958, including at a tuberculosis hospital in the former . Her former colleagues who retreated to the United States sent her packages with medicine, clothing, etc.
She died on 13 June 1963 and was buried in the Rasos Cemetery next to the Lithuanian volunteers, whom she buried in 1920. Her funeral was attended by many Lithuanian activists., her former colleague from the Union for the Liberation of Vilnius, delivered a speech.
Due to the nature of her work, she kept her life private and was virtually unknown to the public. When collected memoirs about her in the United States, many of her acquaintances could testify that she helped many but very few could share specific details about her life, work, or family. Jonas Budrys, head of the Lithuanian counterintelligence, in his memoirs mentioned Kubiliūtė only once, saying that Lithuania's fate was in her hands.
Her life attracted more attention after Lithuania regained independence in 1990. In 1998, her 100th birth anniversary, a street in Lazdynėliai (suburb of Vilnius) was named in her honor. Her memoirs were first published in 1999. In 2023, the Seimas (Lithuanian parliament) marked her 125th birth anniversary as an official state commemoration.
In 2016, the Lithuanian National Radio and Television produced a TV series (Price of Freedom. Volunteers) about the key moments in the history of interwar Lithuania. Kubiliūtė (played by) was one of the main characters in the series. In 2019, director Neringa Danienė staged play Marcelės legenda (Legend of Marcelė) in Rokiškis. It was shown just a few times before being cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was resumed in 2023. In 2023, a documentary film about Kubiliūtė was directed by Justinas Lingys.
Kubiliūtė received the following awards:
She is the only Lithuanian woman awarded all major Lithuanian orders.