Belash, Viktor Fedorovich aka Bilash 1893-1938

Viktor Belash.
Viktor Belash.

A short biography of Viktor Belash. Ukrainian anarchist communist, railway worker, and brilliant strategist of the Makhnovist movement.

Author
Submitted by Battlescarred on August 18, 2008

Viktor Belash was born in 1893 in the village of Novospasovka (Ukrainian form is Novospasivka) in southern Ukraine. Novospasovka was also the home of other anarchists who later participated in the Makhnovist movement like Vassili Kurilenko and Vdovichenko. He received an elementary education and worked as a railway engineer. He was already an anarchist communist in 1908 at the age of fifteen. He arrived in late 1918/early 1919 in Gulyai Polye to link up with Makhno. Here in consultation with Makhno and other partisans, Belash was given the task of organising a congress of military re-organisation. He was elected chief of staff of the Makhnovists on January 3rd at a congress at Pologi with over forty delegates. Belash was acutely aware of the need for better military organisation . The troops of the White general Denikin murdered his father, his grandfather and his two brothers and burned all their property as revenge for Viktor’s involvement in the Makhnovists, according to Arshinov, though Skirda states that it was Austrian forces who murdered his father, grandfather and cousin. As Arshinov says “He was a member of the Council of Revolutionary Insurgents, and a skillful military strategist. He elaborated all the plans concerning troop movements and assumed responsibility for them”.

After Makhno was forced to retreat over the border with Romania on 16th August 1921, as the result of multiple wounds, Belash directed operations against the Reds in his absence.

He was captured by the Bolsheviks on September 23rd 1921, after being heavily wounded in battle at Znamenka. He was imprisoned in Kharkov prison, where he was sentenced to death. Whilst in prison, he was encouraged to write his memoirs by the Cheka, which he was able to do in great detail with the help of his military notes and campaign diary. He filled three large exercise books with these memoirs. Extracts from these appeared in Issue 3 of Letopsis Revoliutsii (Annals of the Revolution) No3, May-June 1928 with many text changes by the Soviet censors. Released by the Soviet government under an amnesty in 1923, he was banished to Krasnodar in the Kuban region. There he worked as a mechanic for the Hunters Union. In December 1937 during the mass purges of Stalin, he was arrested and put in front of a firing squad the following year. He was posthumously rehabilitated on April 1976 for “insufficient evidence”.

His son, Alexander, a World War Two veteran, was able to obtain the manuscript of his father’s work from State archives and published it, with other previously unknown documents, in 1993. It has proved, with its minute details, to be an extremely valuable source on the Makhnovist movement, though it should be read with caution, with the realization that Belash was writing in coded form, and was protecting Makhno and other partisans who were still alive. The military successes of the Makhnovists were in great part due to the organizational capabilities of this anarchist worker.

NICK HEATH

Comments

Karetelnik

14 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Karetelnik on December 3, 2009

Belash's manuscript complements Makhno's own memoirs which only go to the end of 1918. The book by the Belashes preserves much valuable information about the Makhnovshchina.

But the work has received a mixed reaction from contemporary historians of the movement. Skirda described it as "a splendid book." On the other hand, the Ukrainian historian Lev Yaritsky, author of a book on the Makhnovshchina, suggested Viktor Belash's manuscript was ghost-written by Chekists.

The Russian writer Vasily Golovanov, author of well-respected study of the Makhnovist movement, notes that Belash was released from prison in 1923 without being tried. "Evidently he had already been recruited by the GPU... . It is terrible and painful to relate how this fearless partisan and talented commander blackened everything he had worked for and transformed himself into an agent-provocateur..."

Yaritsky published what purports to be Belash's "confession" to the NKVD that was signed on December 28 1937. In it Belash describes his activities in the anarchist underground in Ukraine in the 1920's - 1930's. This document is 14,000 words long!

John Drinkwater

12 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by John Drinkwater on February 19, 2012

Where can I find Belash's manuscript?

polkapinglan

9 years 1 month ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by polkapinglan on February 12, 2015

Malcolm Archibald discribes ( http://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/31zdp5 ) him after being recruited; "not only as an informer, but also as a provocateur trying to push his old associates into suicidal projects."