28 August 1874 Vilejka, now a town in Minsk Region
Died
11 March 1941
Alaksandar Ułasaŭ (Belarusian: Аляксандар Уласаў; 28 August 1874 – 11 March 1941) was a Belarusian politician, a founder and the first editor of the newspaper Naša Niva, and a victim of Stalin's purges.[1][2]
He studied at a theological seminary in Pinsk, a gymnasium in Libava (now Liepaja, Latvia) and later at the Riga Technical University.
Belarusian National Movement
In December 1904, Ułasaŭ became one of the founders of the Belarusian Socialist Assembly and a member of its central committee. During the 1905 Russian Revolution, Ułasaŭ organised workers' strikes in various Belarusian cities, participated in an illegal teachers' convention.[3]
From December 1906 to May 1914, Ułasaŭ was the editor-in-chief of the newspaper Naša Niva and in that role encouraged talented Belarusian writers (such as Janka Kupała) to contribute to the newspaper. For his social and political activities and publications Ułasaŭ was sentenced by the Russian authorities to 4 months of imprisonment in 1909.
At the time of the conclusion of the Polish-Russian Treaty of Riga in 1920, Ułasaŭ lived in Radaškovičy, which ended up in the territory of the Second Polish Republic. He was repeatedly arrested by the Polish authorities for his Belarusian cultural and political activities. Later, in Radaškovičy, Ułasaŭ established a Belarusian gymnasium named after Francis Skaryna.
In 1921, he was one of the founders of the Association of Belarusian Schools - a public organisation that supported Belarusian education in Western Belarus.
In 1922–1927, Ułasaŭ was a senator in the Polish Senate elected from the list of national minorities. He took part in the work of the Belarusian Peasant-Worker Society.[3]