User:JaneAsh12/Government of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | March 18, 1921 |
Preceding agency | |
Jurisdiction | Government of Ukrainian People's Republic |
Government of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile, or State Center of the Ukrainian People's Republic (SC of UPR)[1] – a set of legislative and executive Ukrainian authorities, which due to Bolshevik aggression and the formation of the USSR were partially (in late 1919), and as of late 1920 – completely outside of the UPR, on the territory of the Republic of Poland in Tarnow (some institutions were located in Czestochowa); later on the government agencies operated in Warsaw, Paris, Weimar, Kissingen, Munich, and Philadelphia. The 10th Emergency Session of the Ukrainian National Council recognized the state of Ukraine as the successor of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile and agreed to transfer the powers and attributes of state power to the newly elected President of Ukraine.[2]
Legal basis
[edit]The legal basis of the UPR government was set in the laws "On the temporary Supreme Administration and Legislation in the UPR" and "On the State People's Council", approved on November 12, 1920 by the Directorate of Ukraine. These acts, based on the laws of the Labor Congress of Ukraine, transferred legislative functions and control over the government of the Ukrainian People's Republic to the State People's Council.
However, prior to the convening of this Council, its functions were assigned to the Council of People's Ministers, and the head of the Directorate acted as the head of state, approving laws, treaties, appointments, representation before foreign states. The head of the Directorate, in case of impossibility to perform duties, was represented by the board, and in case of impossibility to convene it – by the chairman of the Council of People's Ministers.
Structure
[edit]- Executive bodies – President (in 1921-1944 - Chief Otaman), the Council of Ministers (1921-1992)
- Legislative bodies – Republic's Council, Ukrainian National Council
Leaders
[edit]Presidents
[edit]- Symon Vasyliovych Petliura — 1921–1926 (Chief Otaman);
- Andrii Mykolaiovych Livytskyi — 1926–1954 (until 1944 — Chief Otaman);
- Stepan Porfyrovych Vytvytskyi — 1954–1965;
- Spyrydon Mykytovych Dovgal — 1966–1967 в.о.;
- Mykola Andriiovych Livytsky — 1967–1989;
- Mykola Vasyliovych Plaviuk — 1989–1992.
Chairmen of the Council of People's Ministers of UPR
[edit]- Andrii Mykolaiovych Livytskyi — 1920-1921
- Pylyp Kalenkovych Pylypchuk — 1921–1922;
- Andrii Mykolaiovych Livytskyi— 1922–1926,
- Viacheslav Kostiantynovych Prokopovych — 1926–1939
- Oleksandr Yakovych Shulhyn — 1939–1940;
- Viacheslav Kostiantynovych Prokopovych— 1940–1942;
- Andrii Ivanovych Yakovliv — 1944–1945;
- Kostiantyn Kostiantynovych Pankivskyi — 1945–1948;
- Isaak Prokhorovych Mazepa — 1948–1952;
- Stepan Ivanovych Baran — 1952–1953;
- Spyrydon Mykytovych Dovhal — 1954;
- Symon Vasylovych Sozontiv — 1954–1957;
- Mykola Andriiovych Livytskyi — 1957–1966;
- Spyrydon Mykytovych Dovhal — 1966–1967;
- Atanas Ivanovych Fihol — 1967–1969;
- Spyrydon Mykytovych Dovhal — 1969–1972;
- Vasyl Lukynovych Fedoronchuk — 1972–1974;
- Teofil Leontii — 1974–1976;
- Ivan Ivanovych Kedryn-Rudnytskyi — 1976–1978;
- Teofil Leontii — 1978–1980;
- Jaroslav Bohdan Antonovych Rudnytskyi — 1980–1989;
- Samiilenko Ivan Matviiovych — 1989–1992.
During the World War II, the UPR government was not active, but Andrii Livytsky was signing documents as the head of the Directorate. After the war, the government was reformed, and included activists from various parties in Western Ukraine and the organized public from sub-Soviet Ukraine.
Chairmen of the Ukrainian National Council
[edit]- Ivan Bahrianyi — 1948-1952 (chairman);
- Ivan Bahrianyi — 1952-1954 (acting chairman);
- Osyp Boidunyk — 1954-1955 (acting chairman);
- Yevhen Oleksiiovych Hlovinskyj — 1955-1957 (acting chairman);
- Ivan Bahrianyi — 1957-1961 (chairman);
- Osyp Boidunyk — 1961-1965 (chairman);
- Spyrydon Mykytovych Dovhal — 1966-1967 (acting chairman);
- Yakiv Makovetskyi — 1967-1971;
- Petro Belei — 1971-1972 (acting chairman)[3][4];
- Spyrydon Mykytovych Dovhal — 1972-1975 (chairman);
- Ivan Ivanovych Kedryn-Rudnytskyi — 1976-1978 (acting chairman);
- Volodymyr Ivanovych Biliaiv — 1979-1984;
- Pavlo Danylovych Lymarenko — 1984-1989;
- Mykhailo Hryhorovych Voskobiinyk — 1989-1992.
Locations of the governing bodies of the State Center of the Ukrainian People's Republic: Tarnow (Poland) – 1921-23; Paris (France) – 1924-26; Warsaw (Poland) – 1926-39; France – 1940-44; Weimar, Bad Kissingen – 1944-46; Munich (all in FRG) – 1946-76; Philadelphia (USA) – 1976-92.
Activity
[edit]Restoration of the UPR structures during the World War II
[edit]After the beginning of the World War II Taras Bulba-Borovets, with the support of the President of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile Andrii Livytskyi, crossed the German-Soviet border and started organizing UPA military units subordinate to the UPR Government. After the Reich's attack on the USSR, together with Belarusian partisans, he captured Olevsk and proclaimed the Olevsk Republic. Due to the demands of the Germans to obey their orders, the civil administration in Olevsk was disbanded, and guerrilla warfare activated. Bulba-Borovets strongly opposed Bandera's attempts to proclaim Ukrainian state in 1941, as he believed that "starting from January 22, 1918, it's not needed to proclaim a Ukrainian sovereign state, as it has already been proclaimed once and it's legitimate government has not stopped it's political activities as an exile government of an occupied country. The statehood could only be restored".[5]
Domestic policy
[edit]The UPR government in exile acted through various ministries and institutions. On the domestic side, due to the opposition of some parties, it failed to create a coordinating political center, and the state center was often treated as a separate party ("uenerivtsi"). The difficulties in the UPR environment arose with the signing of the Treaty of Warsaw (the case of Galicia), and orientation towards the Republic of Poland (members of the government considered it "orientation towards Western Europe"). The UPR government was also criticized for it's attitude towards the struggle of Ukrainians under the Polish Republic, Kingdom of Romania and the Czechoslovak Republic as it tolerated the occupation and limited itself to meeting the "needs of the Ukrainian minority." The domestic department was led by Oleksandr Salikovskyi and Oleksandr Lototskyi, and after the Second World War – by Mykhailo Vetukhiv (1945–1948). The exile government of the UPR was supported by the Ukrainian Revolutionary Democratic Party (former "esefy" – members of the Socialists-Federalists Party), which formed the majority of the government. The Ukrainian Social Democratic Labour Party was not a member of the UPR government, but was loyal to it. On the other hand, the Ukrainian Socialist-Revolutionary Party under the leadership of Mykyta Shapoval was strongly against the exile government – together with the members of the Farmers-Statesmen Union and Ukrainian nationalists (OUN). The position of the political groups in Galicia, primarily the UNDO (Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance), has evolved from objection (because of the Treaty of Warsaw) to a kind of tolerance and even cooperation in specific political and civic actions.
The existence of the State Center of the Ukrainian People's Republic was a symbol of the continuation of the struggle of Ukrainian people for their national independence. Everywhere and under any circumstances, the Center defended the interests of the Ukrainian people, conducted active political and diplomatic work aimed at streamlining the life of Ukrainians abroad, contributed to the formation of the national consciousness of Ukrainians in Ukraine and abroad, coordinated the national, political, scientific, educational and cultural activity of Ukrainian centers around the world. The work of the center embodied a constant fight of Ukrainian emigrants, who drew attention of the whole civilized world to the enslaved state of Ukrainian people in the USSR and supported the determination of Ukrainians and their unquenchable faith in victory. DC of UPR fulfilled its purpose, writing bright pages in the history of the Ukrainian people.
Foreign policy
[edit]A. Nikovskyi and later O. Shulhyn (till 1946) carried out the foreign activities. Initially, there were Ukrainian diplomatic missions in certain countries: K. Matsievych – in Romania, A. Livytskyi – in Poland, M. Slovinskyi – in Czechoslovakia, R. Smal-Stotskyi – in Germany, M. Vasylko – in Switzerland, V. Murskyi – in Turkey, O. Shulhyn – in France, and so on. The latter lasted the longest, others were eliminated in the early 1920s. O. Shulhyn, as the head of the UPR mission in Paris, and later as the Minister of Foreign Affairs, kept in touch with the League of Nations, protesting against the Bolshevik occupation of Ukraine, the actions of Soviet diplomacy, terror and famine in Ukraine. The State Center of the Ukrainian People's Republic prepared a draft of the recognition of the UPR government in exile, this project was proposed to the highest legislative body of the United States by several senators led by D. Kopelyan. He maintained close contacts with the pan-European movement, advocating for the idea of Ukraine's belonging to the European community. He condemned the policy of Germany, France, Italy and Great Britain in dealing with the Carpathian Ukraine's issue. In September 1939 in Paris, the UPR government led by V. Prokopovych declared its solidarity with Western democracies, condemning the totalitarian regimes in Nazi Germany and the USSR. Some international activities were carried out by the UPR government through the Ukrainian Society for the League of Nations. A separate area of work of the UPR government was the organization of cooperation between the "sub-Soviet" peoples – Prometheism, in which not only Ukrainians, but also representatives of the Caucasus, Don, Kuban, Crimea, Turkestan regions participated.
On September 1, 1939, the UPR government in exile, led by V. Prokopovych, declared war on Nazi Germany.[6]
Army
[edit]The UPR government paid special attention to the military department (headed by Generals M. Bezruchko, V. Petriv, V. Salskyi, M. Omelyanovych-Pavlenko), managing the training of military personnel and the organization of former combatants. A number of UPR sergeants were working as contract officers in the Polish army. To popularize the military affairs, the UPR government organized the Ukrainian Historical Military Society, was publishing the "Tabor", "For Statehood" magazines, and other literature.In 1941-1944 the Ukrainian People's Revolutionary Army (Polissian Sich) was officially a subject to the Government of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile.
Culture
[edit]The public and cultural activities of the UPR's exile government were organized through consonant civic formations that existed in different countries: the Union of Ukrainian Emigration Organizations in France, the Ukrainian Central Committee in Poland, the Public Assistance Committee of Ukrainian Emigrants in Romania, the Ukrainian Association in Czechoslovakia and others, whose work was coordinated by the General Emigration Council (headed by O. Shulhyn)[7]. In Paris in 1926, the S. Petliura Library was founded, where the archival materials of the Ukrainian People's Republic were stored.
In 1938, the UPR government founded the Ukrainian Mohyla-Mazepa Academy of Sciences.
Through the activities of the UPR government, the Polish government established the Ukrainian Scientific Institute in Warsaw.
The unofficial body of the UPR government was the weekly magazine "Trident" published in Paris (1925-1940), revived in 1959. After each session of the UPR Council, the Ukrainian Information Bureau published materials and documents.
Members of the government
[edit]Government of the UPR in exile, elected at the tenth session of the Ukrainian People's Republic in 1989[8]:
- Head of the Governmentt— Ivan Samiylenko.
- Deputy Head of the Government — Mykhailo Pap.
- Deputy Head of the Government and Head of the Legal Affairs Department— Mykola Sukhoverskyi.
- State Secretary — Nataliia Pazunyak, co-opted, sworn in later.
- Head of Finance Department — Kost Lutsenko.
- Head of the Regional Affairs Department — Mykhailo Herets.
- Head of the Foreign Affairs Department — Volodymyr Zhyla.
- Head of the Press and Information Department — Volodymyr Marko.
- Head of the Internal Affairs Department — Yurii Ikhtiarov.
- Head of the Special Assignments Department — Mykola Lypovetskyi, Stepan Vorokh, Vsevolod Salenko.
- Archive Director — Yurii Salskyi.
- Head of the State Tribunal — Yaroslav Rudnytskyi.
Reformation and disbandment
[edit]External videos | |
---|---|
The UPR government is resigning - 22.08.1992 |
In exile, the State Center existed without a legislative body – only for a short period of time in 1921 the Republic's Council, a representative body of the UPR consisting of party delegates, professional and cultural organizations, was established in Tarnów. After the World War II, the head of the Directorate A. Livytskyi decided to reorganize the government of the UPR. For this purpose, the Ukrainian National Council was established in 1947 as a pre-parliament of the State Center of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile, which was to continue the ideological and legal traditions of the UPR since the interwar period.
On August 22, 1992, Mykola Plavyuk, President of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile, presented the diploma of the State Center of the UPR to Leonid Kravchuk, the President of Ukraine. This act meant that the Ukrainian independent state, proclaimed on August 24, 1991, was the successor to the Ukrainian People's Republic.
Documentary heritage
[edit]The documentary heritage of the Government of the Ukrainian People's Republic in exile is preserved in the funds of the Central State Archive of Foreign Ukrainika and the Central State Archive of Higher Authorities and Administration of Ukraine.
Notes
[edit]- ^ "Закон України «Про правовий статус та вшанування пам'яті борців за незалежність України у XX столітті»". Archived from the original on 21 вересня 2017. Retrieved 25 липня 2016.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
and|archive-date=
(help) - ^ Плав'юк М. Державний центр УНР на еміграції (ДЦ УНР) Archived 2016-08-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Свобода 1971, No.103" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 липня 2019. Retrieved 18 липня 2019.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|access-date=
and|archive-date=
(help) - ^ "ІСТОРІЯ УКРАЇНСЬКОЇ ДЕРЖАВНОЇ ГІМНАЗІЇ В СТАНІСЛАВОВІ". Archived from the original on 9 листопада 2016. Retrieved 18 липня 2019.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|access-date=
and|archive-date=
(help) - ^ Бульба-Боровець Т. Армія без держави: слава і трагедія українського повстанського руху. Спогади.— Вінніпег: Накладом Товариства «Волинь», 1981.— С. 113—115.
- ^ "80 років тому УНР оголосила війну нацистській Німеччині - Всеукраїнський незалежний медійний простір "Сіверщина"". siver.com.ua. Archived from the original on 9 лютого 2022. Retrieved 2021-02-20.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|archive-date=
(help) - ^ Прилуцький В. І. Головна українська еміграційна рада Archived 2016-04-13 at the Wayback Machine // Енциклопедія історії України : у 10 т. / редкол.: В. А. Смолій (голова) та ін. ; Інститут історії України НАН України. — Київ. : Наукова думка, 2004. — Т. 2 : Г — Д. — 518 с. : іл. — ISBN 966-00-0405-2.
- ^ "Микола Плав'юк. Україна — життя моє. Віктор Терен, Юрій Хорунжий. Від селянського сина — до державника". Archived from the original on 12 квітня 2013. Retrieved 14 квітня 2012.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
and|archive-date=
(help); no-break space character in|title=
at position 24 (help)
[[Category:Bad Kissingen]] [[Category:Weimar]] [[Category:Ukrainian governments]] [[Category:Governments in exile]] [[Category:Tarnów]] [[Category:Ukrainian diaspora]] [[Category:Ukrainian People's Republic]] [[Category:Coordinates not on Wikidata]]