
Nadezhda Konstantinovna Krupskaya
February 1869 - February 1939
She was born in St. Petersburg, Russia. on February 1869
She dieth on February 1939 in Moscow.
Marxist Activist.
Promoted the Sovietic Library System.
She was born in St. Petersburg, Russia on February 1869, her fathers where Konstantín Ignátievich Krupsky an soldier and Elizaveta Vasílevna Tistrova a governess.
Since she was a child she grow up inside a communist family where although her father was a soldier he always thought in the poor people and for that reason he was inside in a trial because one age he was the leader of the district of Grojec where he made built a hospital for the poor people, etc. And he made a survey to the farm workers and this was the main reason because he was got in a trial because that survey was against the farm owners.
Finally he death on February 25, 1883 sick by tuberculosis, after that she and her mother had to work and made several different thinks to survive, although that she could studied and became a teacher and specialize in Russian and Mathematics.
She met Lenin in 1894 as a Marxist Activist, they both where arrested and sentenced to three years of exile during that time they lived in Siberia, finally they got married on July 10, 1898.
Krupskaya was a lover of libraries and developed and promoted the Soviet library system and both Krupskaya and Lenin believed in the importance of libraries, that the conditions of the libraries were an indication of the level of culture.
Krupskaya believed that the "children's book is one of the most powerful weapons of the socialist character-education of the growing generation".
She was able to promote librarianship, through an establishment of a professional library school in St. Petersburg, and retained her influence over the library system until her death. In fact her last public words were pertaining to the future of the Soviet Libraries.
Nadezhda was not only active in librarianship, but also in education, psychology and women's issues. She has written extensively on the importance of the collective upbringing on a child's personality. She has supported the women's movement through the her own example of a strong woman leader and wrote the influential pamphlet, "The Woman Worker" in which she defends the role of women in the socialist revolution.
This time I´ve decided to write about this women because when many people listen or think in Socialism o Communist movements the first idea than they have is than those movements where only bad for everybody, but I think it´s the only idea than news or the most common ways of communication tries to give us but we must not believe in things than other say and we have to look for other kinds of information or other sources that could give us a more truth information.
February 1869 - February 1939
She was born in St. Petersburg, Russia. on February 1869
She dieth on February 1939 in Moscow.
Marxist Activist.
Promoted the Sovietic Library System.
She was born in St. Petersburg, Russia on February 1869, her fathers where Konstantín Ignátievich Krupsky an soldier and Elizaveta Vasílevna Tistrova a governess.
Since she was a child she grow up inside a communist family where although her father was a soldier he always thought in the poor people and for that reason he was inside in a trial because one age he was the leader of the district of Grojec where he made built a hospital for the poor people, etc. And he made a survey to the farm workers and this was the main reason because he was got in a trial because that survey was against the farm owners.
Finally he death on February 25, 1883 sick by tuberculosis, after that she and her mother had to work and made several different thinks to survive, although that she could studied and became a teacher and specialize in Russian and Mathematics.
She met Lenin in 1894 as a Marxist Activist, they both where arrested and sentenced to three years of exile during that time they lived in Siberia, finally they got married on July 10, 1898.
Krupskaya was a lover of libraries and developed and promoted the Soviet library system and both Krupskaya and Lenin believed in the importance of libraries, that the conditions of the libraries were an indication of the level of culture.
Krupskaya believed that the "children's book is one of the most powerful weapons of the socialist character-education of the growing generation".
She was able to promote librarianship, through an establishment of a professional library school in St. Petersburg, and retained her influence over the library system until her death. In fact her last public words were pertaining to the future of the Soviet Libraries.
Nadezhda was not only active in librarianship, but also in education, psychology and women's issues. She has written extensively on the importance of the collective upbringing on a child's personality. She has supported the women's movement through the her own example of a strong woman leader and wrote the influential pamphlet, "The Woman Worker" in which she defends the role of women in the socialist revolution.
This time I´ve decided to write about this women because when many people listen or think in Socialism o Communist movements the first idea than they have is than those movements where only bad for everybody, but I think it´s the only idea than news or the most common ways of communication tries to give us but we must not believe in things than other say and we have to look for other kinds of information or other sources that could give us a more truth information.
2 comments:
Hi Alvaro,
It is a very good article, I learnt many things.
Yhanx.
I never knew somthing about her and found it a interesting personage.
I like the phrase the best weapon is a book.
Post a Comment