Bejimbet Mailin

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Bejimbet Mailin

Bejimbet Scharmaghambetuly Mailin ( Kazakh Бейімбет Жармағамбетұлы Майлин , Russian Беимбет Жармагамбетович Майлин Beimbet Scharmagambetowitsch Mailin * 15. November 1894 in the Oblast Turgai, Russian Empire ; † 10. November 1938 ) was a Kazakh - Soviet writer.

Life

Mailin was born in 1894 in what is now the Qostanai region. He lost his parents at an early age and was raised by his grandmother. From 1911 he visited the madrasa in his home village and learned to write from the local mullah . From 1913 he attended the madrasa in Troitsk and later the madrasa in Ufa . He also attended a Russian-Kazakh school where he learned Russian . Already at this time he began to write his first poems. In 1915 he wrote one of his most famous novels about the tragic love of a girl in a Kazakh village, in which he also raised the issue of equal rights for women.

In 1916 he moved back to his home village, where he taught as a teacher. He also continued to write poems, novels and plays about life in the village. After the Soviet power had also been established in the Turgai Oblast, Mailin held functions in the new regional administration. From 1922 Mailin worked for the newspaper Jengbekschil qasaq in Orenburg , first as editor and later as an employee of the paper. In 1923 his first collection of poems appeared. In 1925 he joined the Communist Party. From 1928 to 1932 he was editor of the newspaper Qasaq tili and in the following two years he worked again for the newspaper Jengbekschil qasaq, which had meanwhile been renamed Sozialdy Qasaqstan. In July 1934 he became editor of the newspaper Qasaq ädebijeti. Together with Ghabit Müssirepow he wrote the play Amangeldi in 1936 , which appeared two years later as the first Kazakh film ever.

In 1938 he was arrested, charged with counter-revolutionary activities, and sentenced to death.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Майлин Беимбет , accessed August 23, 2019 (Russian).
  2. Мусрепов Габит , accessed August 21, 2019 (Russian).