Ivan Kulyk


Ivan Yulianovych Kulyk was a Jewish-Ukrainian poet, writer, translator, diplomat and Communist Party activist. He also wrote under the names "R. Rolinato" and "Vasyl Rolenko".

Biography

Kulyk was born in the city of Shpola, in the Kiev Governorate of the Russian Empire into the family of a teacher. He finished fourth-grade college in Uman where he moved with his parents. There his first poem was published in the Uman newspaper Provincial voice, in Russian.
In 1911 he enrolled into the Odessa Art academy. In 1914, together with his parents, he emigrated to the United States. There he worked in the factories and mines in Pennsylvania. He began publishing his poems in the local Russian newspaper New world. In 1914 he became a member of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party.
In spring 1917 Kulyk travelled through the Russian Far East and Siberia, returning to Kiev where he joined the local revkom. He actively participated in the Kiev Bolshevik Uprising that led to the establishment of the Soviet government in Kiev. In December 1917 he was elected to the Central Executive Committee of Soviets and the first Soviet government of the Ukrainian SSR. In summer of 1918 together with Vitaliy Primakov participated in the formations of the Red Cossacks military units.
From May 1921 to May 1922 he was a secretary of the Kamyanets-Podilsky branch of the Communist Party of Ukraine. There he edited the local newspaper Red Truth, simultaneously teaching history in the Institute of the People's Education. At this time he published his poem the Green heart.
In 1924–1926 he was consul of the Soviet Union in Canada. From September 15, 1930 to June 1932 he returned to Kamyanets-Podilsky as secretary of a raion committee.
He was one of the leaders of the All-Ukrainian Association of the Proletarian Writers, and after 1934 became the leader of the Ukrainian Association of Soviet Writers. Along with those duties he also was head of the State Political Publishing house, edited in the Literary newspaper and the journal Soviet Literature.
He was married to the Ukrainian writer :uk:Піонтек Люціана Карлівна|Luciana Piontek, an ethnic German.
He was arrested during the Great Purge in 1937, charged with "spying against the Soviet Union" and executed by shooting on October 10, 1937. Earlier, on September 25, 1937, his wife was executed as well for "supporting her husband in anti-state activities".