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Liudas Gira

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Name
  
Liudas Gira

Role
  
Poet

Liudas Gira wwwvilnijosvartailtuploadsdocumentspersonalij
Died
  
July 1, 1946, Vilnius, Lithuania

Education
  
Vilnius St. Joseph Seminary

Baltasis kiras liudas gira


Liudas Gira (27 August 1884 in Vilnius – 1 July 1946 in Vilnius) was a Lithuanian poet, writer, and literary critic. His is noted for his early poetry, which resembles traditional Lithuanian folk songs. Gira was active in cultural and political life, gradually shifting towards communism in 1930s. He supported the Soviet Union and helped to transform independent Lithuania into the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic. His son, Vytautas Sirijos Gira, is also a known poet and writer.

Contents

Biography

In 1905, Gira graduated from the Vilnius Theological Seminary, but was not ordained into priesthood. He was active in cultural and political life. Gira participated in the Great Seimas of Vilnius. He was one of the founders of the Lithuanian Populists' Union and one of the leaders of the Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party. In the aftermath of World War I, Gira joined the Lithuanian army, but was jailed by the Bolsheviks during the Lithuanian–Soviet War for six months. He briefly headed the Lithuanian intelligence and helped to discover and liquidate the attempted Polish coup d'etat against the Lithuanian government in 1919. Later he worked as theater director (1922–1926) and as secretary of commission responsible for book publishing under the Ministry of Education (1926–1936).

Soviet Collaborator

In 1930s his political views shifted to communism and he supported the occupation and annexation of Lithuania by the Soviet Union in June 1940. Elected to the People's Seimas, Gira was one of the 20-member delegation sent to petition the Soviet Union to accept the newly proclaimed Lithuanian SSR into the union. He served as Assistant Commissar of Education until occupation by Nazi Germany in June 1941. Gira fled to the Russian SFSR and joined the 16th Rifle Division. After the war he returned to Lithuania, became a full member of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences and was recognized as the People's Poet.

Works

Poetry is most important of Gira's works. The early works borrowed from traditional Lithuanian folk songs of Dzukija region. Because they resembled songs, several poems were set to music and became popular songs. These works idealize Lithuanian history and have features of romanticism. The poems also describe emotional, intimate experiences; they are melancholic and elegant. The early poems were published in several collections, including Dul dul dudele (1909), Zalioji pievele (1911), Lauku dainos (1912), Tevynes keliais (1912). Later works were influenced by symbolism and feature love and patriotism. Compilations from this period include Ziezirbos (1921), Zygio godos (1928), Silko gijos (1928), Amziu zingsniai (1929). The last works were produced under the Soviet influence, reflected the official Soviet propaganda, and conformed to demands of Socialist realism. These poems rejoiced Lithuania's conversion into a soviet socialist republic, praised the Soviet Union, and described heroic Soviet struggle against Nazi Germany. They were published in Zalgirio Lietuva (1942), Smurtas ir ryztas (1942), Tolimuos keliuos (1945). Gira also wrote several plays, including Kerstas (1910), Sveciai (1910), Paparcio ziedas (1928). These works borrowed plots from heroic episodes of the Lithuanian history and were influenced by Vincas Kreve-Mickevicius, Vydunas, and Stanislaw Przybyszewski. Posthumously his works were published in five volumes in 1960–1963.

Gira began writing for periodicals in 1901. He wrote for and edited newspapers Vilniaus zinios (1905–1906), Sviesa (1906), and Lietuvos ukininkas (1907), literary almanac Svyturys (1911–1912), first Lithuanian literary journal Vaivorykste (1913–1914), Literaturos naujienos (1938–1939). He also translated poems by Alexander Pushkin, Mikhail Lermontov, Konstantin Balmont, Wladyslaw Syrokomla, Heinrich Heine, Taras Shevchenko into the Lithuanian language. He also experimented in writing poetry in Polish, Russian, Belarusian languages. Gira compiled and published works by Lithuanian writers Antanas Strazdas, Lazdynu Peleda, Ksaveras Sakalauskas-Vanagelis, Pranas Vaicaitis, and Edmundas Steponaitis. He also compiled several anthologies of Lithuanian poetry, including Lietuva pavasari, vasara, rudeni ir ziema (1911), Cit, paklausykit (1914), As deklamuoju! (1929), Musu tevyne (1930).

References

Liudas Gira Wikipedia