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Jānis Rudzutaks

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Jānis Rudzutaks

Jānis Rudzutaks (Template:Lang-ru; August 3, 1887 – July 29, 1938) was a Latvian Bolshevik revolutionary and Soviet politician.

Rudzutaks was born in the Kuldiga district of the Courland Governorate (present-day Latvia), into the family of a farm worker. In 1903, he started working in a factory in Riga. Two years later, he joined Latvian Social Democratic Labour Party. In 1907, Rudzutaks was arrested and sentenced to 10 years of hard labor. He served a part of his sentence in Riga and was then transferred to Butyrka prison in Moscow. Rudzutaks was released after the February Revolution of 1917.

After his release, Rudzutaks served in various positions in the All-Russia Communist Party, Soviet system and labor unions. He became a close friend and working associate of Vladimir Lenin.[1] From 1920 to 1921, he was the secretary general of All-Russia Central Council of Labor Unions. From 1922 to 1923, Rudzutaks was the chairman of Central Asian bureau of the Central Committee of the All-Russia Communist Party and, from 1923 to 1924, a secretary of the Central Committee. From 1924 until 1934, he was the People's Commissar (i.e., minister) for transportation. In 1926, Rudzutaks was appointed deputy chairman of the Council of People's Commissars (the equivalent of deputy prime minister) and held this position until 1937.

Rudzutaks was a member of the Central Committee of All-Russia Communist Party from 1920 until 1937, a candidate member of the Politburo from 1923 to 1926 and from 1934 to 1937 and a full member of the Politburo from 1926 to 1932.

On May 24, 1937, Rudzutaks was arrested on Stalin's orders. He was accused of Trotskyism and espionage for Nazi Germany, and sentenced to death after a trial, which unlike the well-known Moscow Trials, received very little publicity. He was shot by the NKVD in 1938, and there was a wall of silence surrounding him after this death.[2] In 1956, Rudzutaks's case was re-examined. As a result, he was exonerated and his Communist Party membership was posthumously restored.

The memoirs of another Bolshevik, Anastas Mikoyan, mention that, before the death of Vladimir Lenin in 1924, Lenin proposed Rudzutaks as a replacement for Joseph Stalin as the secretary general of the Communist Party. If true, this would have undoubtedly contributed to Stalin's motivation for eliminating Rudzutaks. While Lenin's criticism of Stalin is well known from the Lenin's Testament, Mikoyan's memoirs are the only source mentioning Rudzutaks as the possible replacement for Stalin.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Barmine, Alexander, One Who Survived, New York: G.P. Putnam (1945), p. 12
  2. ^ Roy Medvedev, Let History Judge, 1971

References

  • Barmine, Alexander, One Who Survived, New York: G.P. Putnam (1945)