Aliaksei Karpiuk


Aliaksei Karpiuk was a Belarusian writer and public figure. Between 1960 until 1960 he was a leader of the intelligentsia in Hrodna and supported dissident writers in the USSR.

Biography

Aliaksei Karpiuk was born into a family of farmers, his father was a supporter of the Communist Party of Western Belarus. He graduated from a Seven-Years-School in 1934 and studied at the Polish lyceum at Wilna from 1938–1939. After the lyceum was forcefully closed during the Soviet occupation of Eastern Poland on 17 September 1939, he studied at the pedagogic college of higher education in Navahrudak.
After the German attack on the Soviet Union he joined a subversive group. He was imprisoned in 1942 during an act of sabotage against railroad tracks, first sent to a prison in Białystok, and later to the German concentration camp Stutthof, which later played an important role in his biography. In autumn 1943 he managed to escape. From this moment on he actively participated in partisan campaigns. In 1944 he became leader of the Kalinovski partisan unit near Hrodna. From 1944–1945 Karpiuk served in the Red Army and participated in battles on Polish and German territory. He was wounded twice and remained a disabled ex-service man.
In 1947 he joined the Communist Party of Belarus. In 1949 he graduated from the Pedagogical High School of Hrodna in the subject of English Language. From 1949 to 1951 he worked in the Office for People's Education in Sapockino and was a director of the Biskup-Seven-Year-School in Vaŭkavysk district.
1953 he published his first work "At an Institute". Since 1953 he was a member of the Association of Writers of the USSR. 1953–1955 he worked in Hrodna at the Pedagogical High School, 1955–1957 at the regional newspaper "Hrodnenskaya Prawda" and as correspondent of the newspaper "Literature and Art". In 1961 he attended advanced training courses for literature in Moscow and became director of the Inturist agency in Hrodna.
1965 he became secretary of the Hrodna branch of the Writers Association of the USSR, 1977-1971 he was director of the "Republican Museum for Atheism and History" in Hrodna. 1978 he was elected again as secretary of the Hrodna branch of the Writers Association of the USSR. In the second half of the eighties he was actively engaged in the public and social life in Hrodna. He was a supporter of the Belarusian Popular Front, one of the founders of the Society of Belarusians of the World "Backaushchyna" and maintained contacts to the club "Pahodnja".
Aliaksei Karpiuk is known for his works about the life in the Western part of Belarus in the first half of the twentieth century – this topic allowed for a depiction of national history under the conditions of Soviet censorship In the Hrodna of 1960–1970 a free thinking intelligentsia gathered around Aliaksei Karpiuk. Some of its members where Vasil Bykau, Danuta Bichel-Zagnetava, Volga Ipatava, Branislau Rsheuski. Aliaksei Karpiuk himself actively distributed forbidden literature in the USSR, and had correspondence with Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Karpiuk had contacts to the family Genijush. Karpiuk's telephone conversations were wiretapped, his flat was secretly searched. Once he was warned on time and managed to destroy incriminating material – letters by Solzhenitsyn, Samizdat literature. As his wife recalled, "illegal literature was assembled at night time and drowned in water... but some materials survived."

Honors

Karpiuk was awarded the Order of the Red Flag, the Order of the Patriotic War, various medals, the Golden Cross of the Polish order Wojenny Virtuti Militari and the Order of Cultural Merit of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic and in 1986 received the Literature-Ivan-Melesh award of the BSSR

Documents