Belarusian Socialist Assembly
The Belarusian Socialist Assembly, BSA (Belarusian: Беларуская сацыялістычная грамада, Belarusian Socialist Hramada, BSH) was a revolutionary party in the Belarusian territory of the Russian Empire. It was established in 1902 as the Belarusian Revolutionary Party, renamed in 1903.[1]
The BSA had branches in Minsk, Vilna and also in St. Petersburg. After the February Revolution in Russia, the political activity in Belarus increased, and in summer of 1917 BSA gave rise to the Communist Party of Byelorussia and the Belarusian Social Democratic Party.
On March 19, 1918, on the initiative of the BSA, the Council (Rada) of the Belarusian People's Republic has become a temporary, short-lived parliament in Belarusian lands. Most of the BNR Council were members of the BSA.
Russian Bolsheviks had a negative attitude towards the BSA. Vladimir Lenin described BSA as a "nationalist petty bourgeois party of left populist orientation".[2] The 2nd Congress of the Soviets of the Western Province (Russia) declared the Council of the Belarusian Republic counter-revolutionary and anti-Soviet.[1]
After the Polish-Soviet War many activists of the BSA have found themselves in Poland, which acquired Western Belarus, and they struggled for the Belarusian autonomy.[1]
Notable members
- Vaclaw Lastowski, politician and historian
- Alaiza Pashkievich, writer
- Jan Sierada, politician
- Branisłaŭ Taraškievič, linguist
- Vasil Zacharka, the second president of the Belarusian People's Republic
References
- Belarus: A Denationalized Nation, by David R. Marples (1999) ISBN 90-5702-343-1, p. 3, 4.
- Jan Zaprudnik, "Belarus: At a Crossroads" (1993, ISBN 0-8133-1794-0), p. 79