Grigol
Robakidze (1880, Sviri (West Georgia) –1962, Geneva) was a Georgian writer,
publicist, and public figure primarily known for his prose and anti-Soviet
émigré activities.
After graduation
from Kutaisi Classical Gymnasium (1900), he took courses at the University of
Tartu (Estonia) and the University of Leipzig (Germany). Robakidze returned
from Germany in 1908, and gradually became a leading person among the young
Georgian symbolists.
He was
Involved in the national-liberation movement of Georgia of 1914-1918. Robakidze
got a diplomatic post in 1919, when he took part in Paris Peace Conference as
an executive secretary of the state delegation of the Democratic Republic of
Georgia.
After
Georgia's Soviet Occupation in 1921, he remained in the country, but was known
for his anti-Soviet sentiments. His famous play Lamara was staged by the
leading Georgian director Sandro Akhmeteli in 1930, a performance which became
a prize-winner at the 1930 Moscow Drama Olympiad.
The success
was so notable indeed that even after Grigol Robakidze defected to Germany the
same year, it continued to be staged to prove the achievements of Soviet
theatrical art, although without the name of the playwright on the announces.
His defection, along with Vladimir Mayakovsky's suicide silenced most of his
fellow poets for a long while. As an émigré, Robakidze had rather unhappy life.
During World
War II, he participated in the right-wing patriotic émigré organizations such
as the Committee of Independence of Georgia (1941), the Union of Georgian
Traditionalists (1942) and Tetri Giorgi. After the war, his two books on Benito
Mussolini and Adolf Hitler were believed to favour Nazism. Famous
representatives of the Georgian Political Emigration rejected this claim.
He died as
broken man in Geneva on November 19, 1962. He was later reburied to the
Cemetery of Leuville-sur-Orge, France, a burial ground of the Georgian
emigration to Europe.
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