Olga Pilatskaya | |
Native Name: | Ольга Пилацкая |
Native Name Lang: | ru |
Term Start: | 29 November 1927 |
Term End: | 27 May 1937 |
Term Start2: | 29 November 1927 |
Term End2: | 27 January 1938 |
Birth Date: | 30 July 1884 |
Mawards: | is not set --> |
Olga Vladimirovna Pilatskaya (Russian: Ольга Владимировна Пилацкая; 1884–1937) was a Russian Revolutionary and Bolshevik Party activist. She joined the party during the Russian Revolution of 1905 and went on to participate in the October Revolution as a member of the party's Moscow district committee. She filled a number of roles in Moscow until the end of the Russian Civil War, upon which she was transferred to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. She became a leading figure within the Communist Party of Ukraine, joining its Central Committee and taking a number of roles within the All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee. She was stripped of all her positions after her arrest and execution during the Great Purge.
Olga Pilatskaya was born on in Moscow, into a working-class family. She graduated from the Moscow Mariinsky Women's School.[1] [2]
In 1904, she joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) and became a member of its Bolshevik faction.[1] [2] She was elected to the RSDLP's Moscow district committee and, in 1905, participated in the December Uprising.[1] In 1909, Olga Pilatskaya was elected a member of the Russian Bureau of the RSDLP's Central Committee. But the following year, she was arrested and internally exiled to Saratov.[1] [2] She fled abroad with her husband Vladimir Zagorsky, moving to Leipzig, where she worked with Vladimir Lenin.[1] In 1914 she returned home to Moscow, where she carried out underground work for the Bolsheviks.[1] [2]
After the February Revolution in 1917, she was again made a member of the RSDLP's Moscow District Committee.[1] [2] She also briefly became a member of the Bolshevik Central Committee, during the events of the October Revolution.[1] In the wake of the Bolshevik takeover, she was appointed secretary of the city's revolutionary committee, as a judge of the local People's Court[2] and as an investigator for the provincial Cheka.[1] [2] In 1921, she joined the People's Commissariat for Education,[2] becoming the secretary of the party's agitprop department.[1] [2]
Following the establishment of the Soviet Union in 1922, she was transferred to Ukraine,[1] [2] where she headed the Communist Party of Ukraine's agitprop department in Katerynoslav province. On 12 December 1925, she was put up as a candidate for the party's Central Committee, which she finally joined on 29 November 1927.[2] On the day she joined the party's central committee, she was simultaneously appointed as head of the women's department of the party, as a member of the presidium of the All-Ukrainian Central Executive Committee, and as a member of the Ukrainian Organisational Bureau.[1] [2] In December 1927, she was a Ukrainian delegate to the 15th Congress of the All-Union Communist Party, and in 1928, she was also delegated to the 6th World Congress of the Communist International.[1]
On 9 April 1929, she was put forward as a candidate for the secretariat of the party's central committee, although her candidacy was rejected on 5 June 1930.[2] Instead, she was appointed as deputy chairman of the Ukrainian State Planning Committee, a position she held until 1937.[1] [2] During this period, she was a delegate to the 16th Congress and 17th All-Union Communist Party Congresses,[1] worked as director of the Ukrainian Institute of Red Professorship from 1932 to 1934 and as director of the Institute of Party History from 1934 to 1936.[1] [2]
In 1937, she was arrested during the Great Purge and consequently stripped of her positions in the Central Executive Committee and the Organisational Bureau.[2] On 22 December 1937,[1] [2] she was executed by shooting. The following month, on 27 January 1938, Pilatskaya was posthumously excluded from membership of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine.[2]