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Belarusian writer and painter (1892–1991) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ludvika Sivickaja-Vojcik (Belarusian: Людвіка Сівіцкая-Войцік; 30 September 1892 – 8 October 1991), known by her pen name Zośka Vieras (Belarusian: Зоська Верас), was a Belarusian writer and one of the initiators and active participants of the Belarusian national revival.[1]
Zośka Vieras | |
---|---|
Зоська Верас | |
Born | Liudvika Sivickaja September 30, 1892 Medzhybizh, Russian Empire |
Died | October 8, 1991 99) Vilnius, Lithuania | (aged
Occupation(s) | Writer, poet |
Notable work | Беларуска-польска-расейска-лацінскі батанічны слоўнік [Belarusian-Polish-Russian-Latin Botanical Dictionary] |
Vieras was born into a noble family in the village of Medzhybizh (nowadays – in Khmelnytskyi district, Ukraine) on 30 September 1892. Her great-grandfather Ihnat Kulakoŭski was a prominent teacher and researcher of the Belarusian ancient history. He was a member of several scientific societies in Denmark, Vilna, Warsaw and St Petersburg.[2] Vieras's father, Anton Sivicki, was born in Hrodna (nowadays – in Belarus) and pursued a military career. His love for reading as well as his national views had a great impact on Vieras's ideas later in her life.[2][3]
After the death of her father in 1908, Vieras, with her mother, moved to Hrodna where she graduated from a private high school for girls (1912) and was an active participant, librarian and secretary of the Hrodna Club of Belarusian Youth.[4] Later, she attended a 10-month course on gardening and apiculture as well as a 6-week military nursing course in Warsaw (1914). Despite her interest in botany, Vieras did not continue her formal education due to her poor health and the beginning of World War I.[3]
Between 1915 and 1918 Vieras lived in Minsk and worked as a secretary of several Belarusian national organizations, including:
In 1917 Vieras participated in the First All-Belarusian Congress that played an important role in the consolidation of the Belarusian national liberation movement. In 1918 she became a member of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic.[11]
In 1918-1922 Vieras lived in the estate of Aĺchoŭniki which belonged to her grandfather. During this time she took care of her ill mother and new born child Anton Šantyr whose father was Fabijan Šantyr,[12] Belarusian poet, writer and public figure sentenced to death and executed by the Soviet authorities in 1920.[13] Later, Anton Šantyr would be also persecuted by the Soviet authorities and would spend ten years in the Gulag prison camps.[2]
In 1923 Vieras moved to Vilnius where she would spend the rest of her life. In 1926 she married Anton Vojcik and, in 1927, their daughter Halina, who would become a famous philologue, was born.[14]
In Vilnius, Vieras was an administrator of the editorial boards of several newspapers published by the Belarusian Peasants' and Workers' Union (1924-1929), an editor of the magazines for kids ‘Zaranka’ (“Morning Star”, 1927–1931) and “Praleska” (“Scilla”, 1925–1935), the chairperson of the Belarusian Cooperative Society “Pčala” (“Bee”, 1928–1939), and an editor of the beekeeping journal “Bielaruskaja borć” (“Belarusian Beehive”, 1934–1938).[2]
She supported Belarusian political prisoners that were held in the Lukiškės Prison. She helped take Michaś Mašara's poems out of the prison and publish his first collection of poetry “Малюнкі” (“Drawings”, 1928). Vieras's own works, together with poems of another prominent Belarusian poet Natallia Arsiennieva, appeared at this time in the journals “Šliach moladzi” (“The Way of Youth”) and “Studenckaja dumka” (“Student’s Thoughts”).[11]
Only in 1961 she was finally “discovered” by the philologue Arsieni Lis who was researching documents for his doctoral thesis in the Vilnius Archives. Since then, she had been visited by writers (Uladzimier Karatkievič, Ryhor Baradulin, Larysa Hienijuš, Danuta Bičeĺ-Zahnietava, Alieś Bačyla), researchers (Adam Maĺdzis, Janka Salamievič, Hienadź Kisialioŭ, Vitaĺ Skalaban), journalists and students and became the centre of the Belarusian literary life of Vilnius. In 1982, Vieras became a member of the Union of Writers of the USSR.[2]
She was one of the founders of the Society of Belarusian Culture in Lithuania established in 1989.[15]
Vieras died on 8 October 1991, at the age of ninety-nine, and is buried in the Paneriai cemetery in Vilnius.[2][16]
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