Sergei Chavain


Sergei Chavain, also spelled Čavajn was a Mari poet and playwright, born Sergei Grigorievich Grigoriev.
In 1905 he wrote the first literary poem in the Mari language, Oto. In 1908 he graduated from Kazan Teachers' Seminary. His first play was The Wild Duck in 1912, a satire of Tsarist bureaucrats. After the October Revolution, Chavain wrote several plays for the first Mari mobile theatre, such as The Autonomy and The Sun Rises, the Storm-clouds Disappear, inspired by the Revolution and Civil War.
Later he wrote plays for a Mari theatre studio, including Jamblat's Bridge, the comedy The Hundred Roubles Bride-money, the musical drama The Bee-Garden, Kugujar , The Live Water, The Timber Mill , Marii Company ), and Akpatyr . The Light of the Coin was a comedy based on Mari popular beliefs. He also translated into Mari several Russian classical plays.
As a writer he is known for his novels One Can Hear the Noise of the Forest, about the 1905 Revolution, and Elnet, about the life of a pre-revolutionary Mari village.
A victim of the Great Purge during the "struggle with bourgeois nationalism", he was executed in Yoshkar-Ola on 11 November 1937 and was posthumously rehabilitated in 1956. The State prize of Mari El is named after Chavain.