Vilis Lācis

Vilis Lācis (12 May 1904 – 6 February 1966) was a Latvian writer and communist politician.[1]

Vilis Lācis
Born(1904-05-12)12 May 1904
Died6 February 1966(1966-02-06) (aged 61)
Occupation(s)Writer, politician

Lācis was born Jānis Vilhelms Lāce into a working-class family in Vecmīlgrāvis (now part of Riga). During World War I, his family fled to the Altai region in Siberia, where Lācis studied at the pedagogical seminary in Barnaul. In 1921, Lācis returned to Riga and at various times worked as a fisherman, port worker, ship's fireman and librarian while writing in his free time. In 1933, he published his hugely successful novel Zvejnieka dēls ('Fisherman's Son'), making him one of the most popular and commercially successful Latvian writers of the 1930s. His novels have been characterized as popular fiction, not always liked by highbrow critics, but widely read by ordinary people.

Throughout this period, Lācis maintained underground ties to the officially banned Communist Party of Latvia. Lācis was under periodic surveillance by the Latvian secret services due to his political activities. Eventually, Lācis became a favorite of Latvian president Karlis Ulmanis, who personally ordered the destruction of the surveillance files on Lācis. Lācis wrote newspaper editorials highly favorable of the Ulmanis regime, while still remaining a Communist supporter, and Ulmanis's government generously funded Lācis's writing and a film adaptation of 'Fisherman's Son'. During the Soviet period, eight films based on Lācis's works were produced, including a new adaptation of 'Fisherman's Son' in 1957.

After Latvia was occupied and forcefully incorporated in the USSR in August 1940, Lācis became Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Latvian SSR (nominally, Prime Minister) and served in this position from 1940 to 1959. When Nazi Germany occupied Latvia from 1941 to 1944, Lācis was evacuated to Moscow, where he continued to write in a socialist realist style. He was regarded mostly as a figurehead, as most of the actual decisions were made by the Central Committee of the Communist Party. As first Minister of the Interior and then Chairman of the Supreme Soviet, he must take personal responsibility for the Stalinist deportations and other aspects of the police state, and signed orders for the arrest and deportation of over 40,000 people.

From 1954 to 1958, Lācis also served as Chairman of the Soviet of Nationalities.[2] He was awarded the Order of Lenin seven times and the Stalin Prize twice, in 1949 and 1952.[3]

Lācis's books have been translated into more than 50 languages, with translations into Russian being the most numerous. He remains the most translated Latvian writer. He was among the contributors of semi-official literary magazine Karogs.[4]

References

  1. Rožkalne, Anita; LU literatūras; folkloras un mākslas institūts (2003). Latviešu rakstniecība biogrāfijās (in Latvian). Riga: Zinātne. ISBN 9984-698-48-3. OCLC 54799673.
  2. "СОЮЗ СОВЕТСКИХ СОЦИАЛИСТИЧЕСКИХ РЕСПУБЛИК". September 28, 2011. Archived from the original on September 28, 2011.
  3. Serdāns, Viesturs (2006). A Hundred Great Latvians. Riga: Latvijas Mediji. p. 120.
  4. Eva Eglāja-Kristsone (2019). "Reading Literary History through the Archives: The Case of the Latvian Literary Journal Karogs". In Aušra Jurgutienė; Dalia Satkauskytė (eds.). The Literary Field under Communist Rule. Boston, MA: Academic Studies Press. p. 202. doi:10.1515/9781618119780-013. ISBN 9781618119780. S2CID 213663806.
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