Moisei Rafes
Moisei Rafes | |
---|---|
משה רפס | |
General Controller | |
In office 13 July 1917 – 14 August 1917 | |
President | Mykhailo Hrushevsky (speaker of the Central Rada) |
Preceded by | Position created |
Succeeded by | Aleksandr Zarubin |
Personal details | |
Born | 3 November 1883 Vilnius, Russian Empire (now Lithuania) |
Died | 1942 (aged 58–59) Komi ASSR, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union (now Russia) |
Political party | Kombund (from 1919) |
Other political affiliations | RSDLP (1907–1919) Jewish Labour Bund (1910–1919) |
Part of a series on |
Bundism |
---|
1890s to World War I |
|
Interwar years and World War II |
After 1945 |
|
People |
Press |
Songs |
Associated organisations |
Splinter groups |
|
Categories |
Moisei Rafes[a] (3 November 1883 – 1942) was a prominent Jewish politician of the Ukrainian People's Republic as the Bundist representative. After 1919 he was an official of the Bolshevik Party until the rise of Joseph Stalin, when he was imprisoned.[1]
Rafes was a member of the 1917 Russian Constituent Assembly[2] and also of the Central Council of Ukraine, the Petrograd Soviet, headed Jewish Bund in Kiev. In Kiev Rafes became a member of the Regional Committee in Protection of Revolution in Ukraine and served as the General Controller of the General Secretariat of Ukraine.[3] He was succeeded at this post by another Bundist, Aleksandr Zolotarev.
When tensions within the Bund heightened, due to the pro-Bolshevik leaning of a part of the leadership, Moisei Rafes was the leader of the centrist wing of the Bund, while Mikhail Liber and Benjamin Kheifetz led the rightists.[4]
However, Rafes led the scissionist Kombund group in Kiev in February 1919, later joined by similar groups in Yekaterinoslav, Kharkov and Poltava, but the Kombund lasted only till May 1919, when it merged into the Komfarband. These moves were apparently motivated by the large-scale pogroms committed by all the armies present in Ukraine at the time, except the Red Army. After the refusal of the Soviet authorities to authorize the formation of a distinct Jewish Communist Party, Rafes, like other former Bundists Esther Frumkin, Alexander Chemerinsky and Rakhmiel Veinshtain, finally joined the upper echelons of the Yevsektsiya, the Jewish section of the Soviet Communist party (CPSU).[5]
Moisei Rafes was at the head of the artistic section of Sovkino and a member of the Sovkino board in the late 1920s and through 1930.[6]
Notes
[edit]Sources
[edit]- ^ Lazić, Branko M.; Drachkovitch, Milorad M. (1986). Biographical dictionary of the Comintern. Hoover Press. p. 532. ISBN 978-0-8179-8401-4.
- ^ Bunyan, James; Fisher, Harold Henry (1934). The Bolshevik revolution, 1917-1918: documents and materials. Stanford University Press. p. 735. ISBN 978-0-8047-0344-4.
- ^ General Secretariat of the Central Rada
- ^ Borys, Jurij (1980). The Sovietization of Ukraine, 1917–1923: the Communist doctrine and practice of national self-determination. Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. pp. 488. ISBN 978-0-920862-03-2.
- ^ Levin, Nora (1990). The Jews in the Soviet Union Since 1917: Paradox of Survival. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-5051-3. Retrieved 2009-11-10.
- ^ Miller, Jamie (November 2006). "The purges of Soviet cinema, 1929–38". Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema. I (1): 5–26. doi:10.1386/srsc.1.1.5_1. ISSN 1750-3132. S2CID 144576497.
- 1883 births
- 1942 deaths
- Politicians from Vilnius
- People from Vilensky Uyezd
- Jews from the Russian Empire
- Jewish Lithuanian politicians
- Jewish Ukrainian politicians
- Bundists
- Ukrainian people of Lithuanian-Jewish descent
- Communist Party of Ukraine (Soviet Union) politicians
- Jewish socialists
- Members of the Central Council of Ukraine
- State controllers of Ukraine
- People who died in the Gulag
- Ukrainian people who died in prison custody
- Jewish biography stubs
- Ukrainian politician stubs