Aleksandr Eiduk


Aleksandr Vladimirovich Eiduk was a Soviet Cheka operative and poet of Latvian ethnicity.

Life

Eiduk was born in Kreis Wenden of the Governorate of Livonia, then part of the Russian Empire.
In 1919, an American diplomat testified to Congress that Eiduk was, with another Cheka leader, considered the "most blood-thirsty monster in Russia". In the 1920s, Eiduk served as a Soviet representative to the American Relief Administration, whose agents appreciated him for "moving with a celerity not characteristically Russian".
During the Great Purge, Eiduk was arrested on June 4, 1938 as a part of the so-called "Latvian Operation of the NKVD". He was shot by the NKVD on August 28, 1938. He was rehabilitated in 1956.

Poetry

Eiduk is best remembered for his poetry extolling the political terror of the Soviet secret police. In Moscow, Eiduk reportedly admitted to a friend, with 'enjoyment in his voice like that of an ecstatic sexual maniac', how pleasing he found the roar of truck engines used at the Lubyanka to drown out the noise of executions.
In the early 1920s, soon after the Red Army invasion of Georgia, he published the following poem in an anthology entitled The Cheka's Smile:

Works