Leninist Young Communist League of Estonia

{{Short description|Youth division of Estonian Communist Party}}

{{Infobox political youth organization

|name = Leninist Young Communist League of Estonia
ELKNÜ
ЛКСМЭ

|native_name = {{langx|et|Eestimaa Leninlik Kommunistlik Noorsooühing}}
{{langx|ru|Ленинский коммунистический союз молодежи Эстонии}}

|colorcode = red

|logo = File:Komsomol Emblem.png

|caption = Emblem

|logo2 =

|caption2 = Flag

|founded = 1940

|dissolved = 1991

|headquarters = Tallinn, Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic

|ideology = {{ubl|Communism|Marxism–Leninism}}

|international = World Federation of Democratic Youth

|national = Komsomol (until 1989)

| mother party=Communist Party of the Soviet Union

| state party=Communist Party of Estonia

|preceded by=Young Communist League of Estonia

|membership = 162,202 (1980)

|newspaper = Noorte Hääl

}}

The Leninist Young Communist League of Estonia ({{langx|et|Eestimaa Leninlik Kommunistlik Noorsooühing}}, ELKNÜ) was a political youth organization that served as the Estonian branch of Komsomol and as the official youth organ of the Estonian Communist Party (EKP). It existed from 1940 until the dissolution of the EKP in 1991.

History

File:Oskar Cher.jpg, First Secretary of the Central Committee of the ELKNÜ, 1940–41]]

Formed in the wake of the Soviet occupation of Estonia in 1940, the ELKNÜ acted as the successor to the clandestine Young Communist League of Estonia, which operated during the interbellum. As in other branches of the Komsomol, the ELKNÜ facilitated the provision of ideological instruction, leisure activities, volunteer work, sporting, technical training, theatre and drama clubs, and other activities to engage youth and develop politically and socially dedicated future party members.{{cite book |last=Miljan |first=Toivo |author-link= |date=2015 |title=Historical Dictionary of Estonia |url= |location= |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |pages=167–68 |isbn= 978-0810875135}} In preparation for the sailing program at the 1980 Summer Olympics, the ELKNÜ assisted in the construction of olympic facilities in Tallinn. Throughout its existence, ELKNÜ youth volunteers engaged in projects across the Soviet Union including the Virgin Lands campaign and the construction of the Baikal–Amur Mainline. By 1980, the ELKNÜ had 162,202 members.{{cite book |last=Raun |first=Toivo |author-link= |date= February 2002|title=Estonia and the Estonians: Second Edition, Updated |url= |location= |publisher=Hoover Press |page=209 |isbn= 0817928537}}

Faced with declining membership in the wake of the push for independence in the late 1980s (including a mass resignation of members in 1987), the ELKNÜ elected to withdraw itself from the Soviet Komsomol and pursue a new programme congruent with an independent Estonia in November 1989. It reconstituted itself after three months as an organisation unaffiliated with the union-wide Komsomol, though membership dropped to 30,000 by 1990.{{cite book |last=Pilkington |first=Hilary |author-link= |date=2013 |title=Russia's Youth and its Culture: A Nation's Constructors and Constructed |url= |location= |publisher=Routledge |page= |isbn= 978-1134876433}} Nevertheless, the decision of the EKP and ELKNÜ to stand against Moscow and support the move for independence enabled Estonian communists and socialists to maintain some popularity among the population, which has played a role in the post-independence Estonian political sphere.{{cite book |last1=Backes |first1=Uwe |last2=Moreau |first2=Patrick |date=2008 |title=Communist and Post-communist Parties in Europe |url= |location= |publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht |page=172 |isbn= 978-3525369128}}

The official newspaper of the organization, published by the Central Committee (Keskkomitee) of the ELKNÜ, was Noorte Hääl.

class="wikitable"

|+ First Secretaries of the ELKNÜ Keskkomitee{{cite book |last=Graf |first=Mati |date=2008 |title=Kalevipoja kojutulek: 1978. aasta poliitilisest pööripäevast 1988. aasta suveräänsusdeklaratsioonini |trans-title=Kalevipoeg's Homecoming: The 1988 Declaration of Sovereignty on the Political Equinox of 1978|url= |language=Estonian |location= |publisher=Argo |isbn= 978-9949438532}}

NameTerm
Erich Tarkpea1940–1941
Oskar Cher1941–1942
Juliana Telman1943–1944
Arnold Meri1945–1949
Boris Tolbast1949–1955
Vaino Väljas1955–1961
Jaan Lüllemets1961–1964
Taimo Suuresaar1964–1966
Rein Pollimann1966–1969
Aare Purga1969–1972
Indrek Toome1972–1978
Donald Visnapuu1978–1984
Arno Almann1984–1988

References