Platon Halavach Explained

Platon Halavach (Belarusian: Платон Раманавіч Галавач; Russian: Плато́н Рома́нович Голова́ч; 1903 – October 29, 1937) was a Belarusian writer and editor. During the Great Purge, he became a victim of the 1937 mass execution of Belarusians.

Biography

Born into a peasant family, then left an orphan at an early age, Halavach worked as a shepherd from the age of seven. He studied at a parochial school, and during his school years he began to participate in a literary circle.

He was one an organizer of the Komsomol movement in his volost, creating a Komsomol cell in his native village in 1920. He actively participated in eliminating illiteracy among the adult population, organizing a club and a reading room. Together with other Komsomol members, he delivered newspapers from Babruysk. He became a village correspondent for the district newspaper “Kamunist”, wrting articles about the life of the village Komsomol cell.

In conditions when rural activists were killed in the volost by Stanisław Bułak-Bałachowicz's forces, Halavach worked in the most critical areas. The Babruysk district committee noticed him and sent him to study at the Minsk Party School. In 1926 he graduated from the Communist University of Belarus.

In 1922-1923 he worked as an instructor in the Barysaw district committee of the Komsomol. In 1923 he joined the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), later renamed the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks). Beginning in 1926 he was the head of the organizational department of the Komsomol of Belarus; in 1928he became the first secretary of the Central Committee of the Komsomol of Belarus. He edited the newspaper “Chyrvonaya Zmena” and the literary magazines “Maladnyak” and “Polymya”, while carrying out extensive social, educational and educational work.

From 1923 to 1928 he headed the literary organization Maladnyak. In November 1928, the association was reorganized into the Belarusian Association of Proletarian Writers (Belarusian Association of Proletarian Writers).

He was elected a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Belarus (1927-1930) and the Central Executive Committee of the BSSR (1927-1935). In 1934 he was admitted to the Union of Writers of the USSR.

Purge and rehabilitation

In the 1930s, Halavach, like most of those associated with Maladnyak, was repressed. In 1937, he was arrested; the investigators confiscated 67 notebooks of manuscripts (perhaps among them was the novel "He"). In connection with the arrest, he was expelled from the Communist Party of Ukraine (b).

His trial on October 28, 1937 took only fifteen minutes. He pleaded guilty. The troika of the NKVD convicted him as an "organizer of a terrorist group" and for "carrying out German-fascist activities" to the highest penalty with confiscation of property.

He was shot a few hours after the verdict in the Minsk NKVD prison. It was announced to the family that he died on December 25, 1944 in the camp from heart failure. He was rehabilitated in 1956.

Family

He was married to Nika Feodorovna Vechar (born in 1905 in the village of Mashchytsia, Slutsk District, Minsk Province); they raised two children. She was arrested on November 5, 1937 in Minsk, and on November 28, 1937, she was sentenced by the NKVD as a "family member of a shot enemy of the motherland" to eight years and sent to the Karaganda concentration camp of the NKVD of the Kazakh SSR (Dalinskaya village). After her release, she returned to her homeland. Rehabilitated on July 24, 1956.

Legacy

Halavach was also engaged in literary activities, making his debut in print in 1921. His first short story "Lost Life" was published in the newspaper "Soviet Belarus" in 1925. In 1927, the first book of short stories, "The Little Things of Life", was published. He is also the author of short story collections "I Want to Live" (1930), "Stories" (1934), short stories "Guilty" (1930), "Fright on the Corrals" (1930), "Dollars" (1931), "Bearers of Hate" (1936, magazine "Flame of the Revolution"), "They will not pass!" (1937, magazine "Flame of the Revolution"), the novel "Through the Years" (1935, republished in 1936, 1984), an essay on the construction of the White Sea-Baltic Canal "From Bear Mountain to the White Sea" (1934).

Many of his works remained unfinished, including a book about the uprising of 1863-1864 and Kastus Kalinowski. A partial list of his work includes;

Halavach's works have been translated into Russian, Polish, Ukrainian, Czech, Hebrew and other languages.

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