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Alexander Lvovich Kazembek

For other people with the same name, see Alexander Kazembek (disambiguation).

Alexander Lvovich Kazembek (Russian: Алекса́ндр Льво́вич Казембе́к, or Казем-Бек; French: Alexandre Kasem-Beg; 15 February::1902, Kazan:– 21 February 1977, Moscow), often spelled Kazem-Bek or Kasem-Beg, was a Russian émigré and political activist, and founder of the Mladorossi political group.

Contents

  • 1 Life
  • 2 References
  • 3 Sources
  • 4 External links

Life

Kazembek was born into a wealthy noble family. His great-grandfather Alexander Kasimovich Kazembek was a prominent Russian scholar, member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the British Royal Asiatic Society, to whom The Cambridge History of Russia refers as "a Dagestani Persian of Shi‘i origin". Robert P. Geraci refers to his great-grandfather as "an Azeri who converted to Christianity." The Archival Collections of Columbia University Libraries refers to Lvovich Kazembek himself as born "into an old noble family of Persian (Azeri) origin".

After the October Revolution and the White Army's loss of Povolzhye and Siberia, the Kazembeks emigrated to Belgrade (where Kazembek finished high school) and later to Munich. In 1925, Kazembek graduated from Ins*ut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris and started working at a credit union in Monte-Carlo, Monaco. In 1929, he returned to Paris already as a famous political activist within Europe's Russian community. In the 1920s, Kazembek founded the Mladorossi. His charismatic persona, clear ideas and oratorical abilities led to strong support of his leadership by many White émigrés.

Like many other expatriate Russian political organizations of the pre-World War II decades, the Mladorossi sought restoration of the monarchy in Russia. In addition, the main goal was to meet the needs of the poor and somewhat preserve contemporary ruling methods in the Soviet Union, however, without dismissing traditional values and ins*utions. Kazembek placed great emphasis on the role of the Russian Orthodox Church, then persecuted by Joseph Stalin. Some regarded the idea as utopic and an oxymoron and so in the West the Mladorossi were often seen as Soviet agents, but in the Soviet Union, they were presented as nationalists and imperialists. Kazembek's political popularity started to decline after it was revealed that he held meetings with a number of Soviet officials trying to recruit him into collaboration. In 1940, he was arrested and detained in a concentration camp, but he was soon released and moved to San Francisco, California, where he worked as a columnist for the Russian-language newspaper, Novaya Zarya and *isted the YMCA in providing help to the Russian hostages in German camps. Thus, by 1942, the Mladorossi party was proclaimed officially dismissed. Between 1944 and 1957, Kazembek taught Russian language and literature at Yale University and Connecticut College. He was also deeply involved in religious work and co-operated with various Russian Orthodox organizations in North America. In 1954, while he was visiting New Delhi Kazembek applied for permission to return to the Soviet Union permanently.

In 1957, his reputation suffered a blow when Pravda published a pro-Soviet article and claimed that Kazembek was its author. He demanded immediate rehabilitation from the newspaper and threatened to commit suicide if his demands were not met. In 1957, his request of the Soviet citizenship was sustained. He returned to the Soviet Union and worked at the Moscow Patriarchate's Department of Exterior Affairs until his death in 1977. He was buried in the village of Lukino (a Moscow suburb), near the local Church of the Transfiguration.

References

    Sources

    • M*ip, Mireille. Alexandre Kasem-Beg et l'émigration russe en Occident, 1902-1977. Georg Editeur S.A., Paris: 1999

    External links

    Aleksandr Kazem-Bek Papers at the Rare Book and M*cript Library, Columbia University, New York, NY