Picture of Lenin’s ‘true love’ uncovered

Apollinariya Yakubova was a close associate of the revolutionary and his wife.

May 06, 2015 04:04 am | Updated 04:04 am IST

In this May 1, 2015 photo, a supporter of Russia's Communist party wears a t-shirt with an image of Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin during a May Day rally in central Stavropol.

In this May 1, 2015 photo, a supporter of Russia's Communist party wears a t-shirt with an image of Soviet state founder Vladimir Lenin during a May Day rally in central Stavropol.

A London-based academic has uncovered a photograph of the woman described by some as Vladimir Lenin’s true love and the “primeval force of the black earth” by her contemporaries, after the image was lost for nearly a century.

Dr. Robert Henderson, a Russian history expert at Queen Mary University London, uncovered a photograph of Apollinariya Yakubova — a Russian revolutionary who fled to King’s Cross in London at the turn of the 20th century. Yakubova and her husband were close associates with Lenin and his wife Nadezhda Krupskaya, who lived intermittently in London between 1902 and 1911, although Yakubova and Lenin were known to have a tempestuous and fractious relationship over the policies of the Russian Social Democratic Labour party.

Henderson uncovered the photograph in the bowels of the State Archive of the Russian Federation in Moscow in April while researching the life of another young revolutionary, Vladimir Burtsev, for a book.

According to the academic, Lenin called Yakubova by the pet name “Lirochka,” which can be roughly translated as “a bit like ‘Bobbykins’,” he said. Yakubova, then 27 and living in a now-demolished building in Regent Square near the British Library in central London, was a force of nature, known for orchestrating debates on communist doctrine in the East End. She was also a key member of a group running lecturing society debates in Whitechapel.

In an academic paper due to appear in the December 2016 issue of Revolutionary Russia , Henderson writes that she was “possessed of an indomitable spirit and boundless energy.”

Daughter of a priest, she studied at the physics and mathematics department of the St. Petersburg Higher Courses for Women, before teaching evening and Sunday classes for workers. It was there she formed a close friendship with Lenin’s wife-to-be. She was imprisoned, like Lenin, in a Siberian camp for political activity, and escaped to travel the 7,000 miles to London, where she became a crucial figure in the party in exile.

She is best known, however, because of the 1964 claim of American journalist Louis Fischer that Lenin proposed to her and was turned down. “Whether or not this is true, from reminiscences of her contemporaries it is clear that Yakubova possessed numerous qualities that would attract even the most stony-hearted individual,” writes Henderson.

She was described by a contemporary as “a marvellous person, intelligent, staunch, decisive and unusually truthful” who “exuded a fresh fragrance of meadow grasses.”

— © Guardian Newspapers Limited, 2015

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