Komsomol of Ukraine

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Leninist Communist League of Youth of Ukraine
Ле́нінська Комуністи́чна Спі́лка Мо́лоді Украї́ни (ЛКСМУ)
Емблема ЛКСМУ.jpg
Logo
Прапор ЛКСМУ.jpg
Flag
AbbreviationLCSYU
Formation26 June 1919 (1919-06-26)
Typeyouth organization
Official language
Russian, Ukrainian
LeaderMykhailo Kononovych
Parent organization
Communist Party of Ukraine and
Komsomol Central Committee
AffiliationsMolod Ukrayiny (1991)
Websitehttp://komsomol.info/
Organization's document

Komsomol of Ukraine, officially Leninist Communist League of Youth of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Ле́нінська Комуністи́чна Спі́лка Мо́лоді Украї́ни), is a revived All-Ukrainian youth organization that first was established in 1919 as a youth wing of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine and later revived in 1997 as a youth wing of the modern Communist Party of Ukraine. It was a component part of the All-Union Lenin's Communist League of Youth (Komsomol).

History[]

The Komsomol in Ukraine was established on June 26, 1919 as the Communist League of Working Youth of Ukraine. In the Soviet Union such organization existed in 1919–1991. It was dissolved after the Communist Party of Ukraine was prohibited in Ukraine. It was revived in 1997. The original publishing newspaper was Molod Ukrayiny (1925–1991).

In 2011 with the support from the Communist Party of Ukraine and the Ministry of Education and Science, Komsomol initiated a process on revival of the Pioneer Organization of Ukraine. The base of such organization will be a reformed ideology of Children Communist. It currently a member of the  [ru; zh], as is its mother party.[1]

Leaders of Komsomol[]

# Years Name Notes
2 1922–1922
3 1922–1923
1 1923–1923
4 1923–1925
5 1925–1927
6 1927–1928 Alexander Milchakov
7 1928–1930
8 1930–1933
9 1933–1937
10 1937–1938
11 1938–1943
12 1943–1947
13 1947–1950 Vladimir Syemichasny
14 1950–1954 Georgiy Shevel
15 1954–1960
16 1960–1968
17 1968–1972 Aleksandr Kapto
18 1972–1975 Andrei Giryenko
19 1975–1983
20 1983–1986
21 1986–1989 Valeriy Tsybukh
22 1989–1991 Anatoliy Matviyenko
# Years Name Notes
1 1997–???? ?
2 2014–present Mykhailo Kononovych

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Communists and Orthodox united in the "Left Opposition"". Religion in Ukraine (in Russian). 17 June 2015. Retrieved 13 May 2018.

External links[]

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