Mykola Shpak (real name Mykola Ipolitovych Shpakivskyy) (Ukrainian: Микола Шпак; 23 February 1909 – July 1942) was a Ukrainian poet, writer and translator. He also was a partisan during the German-Soviet war.
Mykola Shpak | |
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Native name | Микола Шпак |
Born | Mykola Ipolitovych Shpakivskyy 23 February 1909 Lypky, Russian Empire |
Died | July 1942 Kyiv, Reichskommissariat Ukraine | (aged 33)
Occupation | poet, writer, translator |
Language | Ukrainian |
Nationality | Ukrainian |
Citizenship | Soviet Union |
Years active | 1925 - 1942 |
Signature | |
Life
editMykola Shpakivskyy was born in the village of Lypky in Kiev Governorate (today Zhytomyr oblast) of the Russian Empire. His father was a farmer. After graduating from the seven-year school in 1926, he moved to Kyiv, where he studied at various universities for several years. Around these years, Mykola began to publish his poems in the magazine "Molodnyak" and other periodicals.
In 1930, he moved to Kharkiv to work in the editorial office. From 1931 to 1932, he was in the ranks of the Red Army, preparing for publication his first collection of poems. In 1933, he worked in Zaporizhzhia. In 1934, he became a member of the National Writers' Union of Ukraine, moved to Kyiv and devoted himself entirely to literary activities. During the six prewar years, he published collections of poetry, translated a lot and wrote for children. He also was the head of the publishing house "Ukrainian Worker" and worked as an editor in different magazines.
After the start of the German-Soviet war, Shpak worked for some time on the radio, wrote articles for newspapers and anti-Nazi leaflets. In summer, he fought near Kyiv in the ranks of the Soviet army, where he was surrounded and captured. He was placed in a Nazi concentration camp, but managed to escape and soon get to the Zhytomyr oblast, where he organized an underground resistance group and the partisan detachment "For freedom". In spring of 1942, the underground organization failed and the partisans, led by their leader, retreated into the forests. Mykola Shpak could no longer stay in his native village, so he went to occupied Kyiv, where hoped to establish a connection with the local underground. However, he did not succeed. On 19 July 1942, the poet was arrested in Kyiv and soon tortured to death by the Gestapo. The place of his burial is unknown.[1][2]
Mykola Shpak was married with Zinaida Horbatenko, they had three daughters.
Work
editMykola Shpak began to write poetry at the age of sixteen. His lyric poetry of the prewar period concerns the Soviet Ukrainian countryside and people's life. During the Second World War he wrote sharp satirical poems directed against the Nazi aggressors. Shpak managed to publish five collections of poetry: "Report to Narkom" (1933), "On Watch" (1934), "My Love" (1936), "Wealth" (1938), "Power of the Earth" (1940). At the beginning of 1941, he prepared a collection of his selected poems "Beautiful ryes", but it was published only after the poet's death in 1947.
He also wrote short stories and improved his style as a translator (he translated the works of V. Mayakovsky, N. Nekrasov and others, folk songs).[2]
Example of his work
Аероплани над селом, |
Above the village aeroplanes, |
Legacy
edit- Street names and memorial plaques in Kyiv and Lypky
- Mykola Shpak Museum in Lypky
References
edit- ^ "Журнал Вітчизна №5-6_2005 МИКОЛА ШПАК". vitchyzna.ukrlife.org (in Ukrainian).
- ^ a b "Шпак Микола | ЖОУНБ". www.lib.zt.ua (in Ukrainian).