Leon Gaikis


Leonid Yakovlevich Gaikis. Soviet diplomat, the second USSR ambassador to Spain, where he served during the Spanish Civil War. In 1937 he was recalled to Moscow, arrested and soon shot, as part of the Great Purge.

Early Years

Born in 1898 in Warsaw, then controlled by the Russian Empire, to a Jewish bourgeois family under the birth name Leon Haykis. His childhood was influenced by the major events in society, against the background of the Polish Revolution of 1905.
He was a student at the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Warsaw, though he didn't finish his studies there. He became a sympathizer of the 'Polish Socialist Party – Left' before 1914, and worked as a teacher at the folk school in the years 1914—1915. In 1917 he became a member of Rosa Luxemburg's party, the SDKPiL, which merged with PPS-L the following year to become the Communist Party of Poland. He was arrested in Warsaw in 1918 for communist agitation.
In 1919 he joined the Red Army and served in the 11th Army of the Western Front. After 1919, he served as an officer of the Kazakh Military Revolutionary Committee. From February 1920, he served as a representative of Kazrevkom in the department of management of the Orenburg provincial executive committee "for the organization of rear militia". From May 1920, he was one of the leaders of the “Special Commission for Survey and Organization of the Soviets in Turgai and Irgiz Counties”. In August—October 1920, was the business manager and technical secretary of Kazrevkom.

Soviet diplomatic career

The Soviet Union established diplomatic relations with the Second Spanish Republic in 1933. A long-standing Bolshevik, Anatoly Lunacharsky, was appointed as the ambassador to Spain but died en route. Eventually, Marcel Rosenberg was appointed as the first ambassador in 1936. Leon Gaikis was sent along to serve as an adviser to the ambassador. They arrived after the Spanish Civil War already started.
The following year, Rosenberg was recalled to Moscow. This came shortly after a meeting between Stalin and the Spanish ambassador to Moscow, Marcelino Pascua, where the former said, "as for Rosenberg, we'll recall him and send down someone less enfant terrible. Someone more 'official'". On 19 February 1937, Gaikis was appointed to replace Rosenberg, who soon vanished in the Great Purge.
It wasn't long after that Gaikis himself fell victim to the purges. In June 1937 he was recalled to Moscow. He thought that would be a routine matter, but was arrested on arrival. Having allegedly supported the Trotskyite Left Opposition faction's platform back in 1923, Gaikis was now prosecuted, like many others, under the charge of Trotskyism. He was sentenced to death by the Military College of the Supreme Court of the USSR, "for betrayal of the Fatherland and belonging to a counter-revolutionary terrorist organization". He was shot on the same day, 21 August 1937, at the age of 39.
After the purge of Rosenberg and Gaikis, no official ambassador was appointed again until 1977, and the embassy was headed by the chargé d'affaires.
Leon's wife, Helena, who stayed behind in Spain with their two little daughters, went later to Russia to find out what happened. She was immediately thrown out of the party and in 1941 was arrested due to a law which held responsible the closest relatives of incriminated people. She was sentenced to 10 years and sent to Siberia. In 1945, at the end of the Second World War, she was released as part of a deal acquired by the Union of Polish Patriots and sent to the wrecked Warsaw.
After the death of Stalin, Leon Gaikis was posthumously rehabilitated, on 17 December 1955, by the Military College of the Supreme Court of the USSR.