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Eino Abramovich Rahja (20 June 1885 – 26 April 1936) was a Finnish-Russian revolutionary who joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1903, becoming aligned with the party's Bolshevik faction. Rahja organized Lenin's temporary escape to Finland in the summer of 1917. During the Finnish Civil War, Rahja was one of the most capable military leaders of the Reds. After the Reds lost the war, he fled to the Russian SFSR where he lived for the rest of his life and became, for example, a commander of the army corps (komkor) in the Red Army.[1]

Eino Rahja was expelled from the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Finland in 1927. In the early 1920s he was politically close to Grigory Zinoviev.[1]

Eino was a brother of Jukka Rahja and Jaakko Rahja. His brother, Jukka, was killed during the Kuusinen Club Incident on 31 August 1920.

Rahja was expelled from the army in 1935 for his alcoholism and later sentenced to death in 1936,[citation needed] however, he died in April 1936 from tuberculosis and alcohol abuse, before he could be executed.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Paastela, Jukka (2003). Finnish communism under Soviet totalitarianism: oppositions within the Finnish Communist Party in Soviet Russia 1918-1935. Kikimora. Helsinki: Kikimora Publications. ISBN 978-952-10-0755-2. OCLC 53166825.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  2. ^ Хански, Яри. "Ejno Raxʹja" Эйно Рахья [Eino Rahja]. Sto zamečatelʹnyh finnov Сто замечательных финнов [One hundred wonderful Finns] (PDF) (in Russian). pp. 484–489. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 June 2007.
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