Kipras Bielinis | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 7 December 1965 New York, United States | (aged 82)
Resting place | Lithuanian National Cemetery Petrašiūnai Cemetery (reburied) |
Nationality | Lithuanian |
Occupation | Politician |
Political party | Social Democratic Party of Lithuania |
Board member of | Supreme Committee for the Liberation of Lithuania (VLIK) Lithuanian National Foundation |
Parent | Jurgis Bielinis |
Kipras Bielinis (26 September 1883 – 7 December 1965) was a Lithuanian politician, one of the leaders of the Social Democratic Party in interwar Lithuania.
Bielinis was a son of Jurgis Bielinis, one of the best known Lithuanian book smugglers. Bielinis attended a gymnasium in Riga, but was expelled for his social-democratic activities. He joined the Social Democratic Party of Lithuania and along with Steponas Kairys was one of its leaders until his death.[1] Bielinis was an active participant in the Russian Revolution of 1905 delivering some 30 public anti-Tsarist speeches across Lithuania. He was arrested by the police together with other members of the Latvian Social Democratic Workers' Party in November 1907 and was sentenced to four years of hard labor and then exile to the Irkutsk Oblast. After the February Revolution, he moved to Petrograd and returned to Lithuania in summer 1918. Bielinis was elected to the Constituent Assembly of Lithuania in April 1920, Second Seimas in May 1923, and the Third Seimas in May 1926. A member of the opposition to the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party, he was one of the most active speakers during the parliamentary sessions. After the coup d'état of December 1926, Bielinis withdrew from more active political life working as a finance director at the Lithuanian Chamber of Agriculture and board member of several cooperatives. During the German occupation of Lithuania, Bielinis was a member of the resistance and organized the Supreme Committee for the Liberation of Lithuania (VLIK).[1] In 1944, as many other Lithuanian intellectuals, he retreated west ahead of the advancing Red Army and moved to the United States in 1949.[2][3] He was an active member of various anti-Soviet Lithuanian organizations. Four volumes of his memoirs were published in 1958–2012.