Papečkys was deported to the Sverdlovsk Oblast during the June deportation in 1941. He was executed on 4 November 1942 and likely buried in a mass grave outside of Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg).
Biography
Early life
Juozas Papečkys was born on 1 January 1890 in the Puskepuriai [lt] village of the Suwalki Governorate to a peasant family.[1] Because he was born on the night of the new year, some documents note his birth year as 1889. Papečkys was the oldest of eight brothers and three sisters. As was customary in rural Lithuanian society, the eldest son was to be sent off to a priest seminary. However, at the age of 15, Papečkys refused to become a priest. As a result, Papečkys was expelled from his home.[1]
Education
Papečkys managed to get admitted to the Marijampolė Gymnasium, where he joined the Lithuanian National Revival. Papečkys noted in his autobiography that since the third grade, he participated in the distribution of illegal books and patriotic proclamations, and organized village youth and schoolchildren, preparing lectures and performances for them.[1] In 1908, Papečkys began contributing articles to Vilniaus žinios, Lietuvos ūkininkas, and other Lithuanians newspapers. Together with Petras Klimas and others, he also published a secret newspaper Mokinių draugas (Friend of the Students). As a result, the Tsarist police arrested the students, expelled them from the school, and jailed them in Kalvarija for about six months.[1][2]
Their trial took place in summer 1909. Due to the efforts of the State Duma representative and lawyer Andrius Bulota, they were acquitted and allowed to return to the gymnasium.[1] After graduating in 1910, Papečkys continued his studies at the faculty of law of the University of Moscow. He continued to be active in Lithuanian cultural and social life. In fall 1909, he once again was arrested for two weeks for participating in a student protest.[1] In 1910–1911, he assisted in editing the youth magazine Aušrinė.[3] In 1916, he graduated from the university and received a law diploma.[4] In addition to Russian and Lithuanian, Papečkys knew the Polish, German, French, Italian, and Latvian languages.[5]
World War I and the Russian Civil War
In 1916, Papečkys was mobilized into the Russian Imperial Army as a private and assigned to the 57th Reserve Infantry Regiment in Tver.[1] He was then sent to the Moscow Alekseevsky Military School [ru]. Upon graduation, he received the rank of praporshchik and was assigned to the 85th Reserve Infantry Regiment in Moscow.[6] He served in the regiment until the October Revolution of 1917.[1] A collection of his poems under the pseudonym Juozas Rainis was published in Boston (United States).[7]
In 1918, Papečkys moved to Pyatigorsk in the northern Caucasus where he joined a committee, organized by Juozas Avižonis, that provided aid to the Lithuanians war refugees.[6] When Pyatigorsk became the capital of the Terek Soviet Republic, Avižonis and Papečkys organized a commissariat for Lithuanian refugees.[8] In early 1919, he was mobilized into the Volunteer Army commanded by Anton Denikin. However, he went into hiding and avoided the mobilization. In summer 1919, Papečkys organized a group of 40 Lithuanian refugees and their journey from Pyatigorsk to Lithuania.[9][10]
On 25 August 1921, Papečkys became the judicial consultant of the Lithuanian Ministry of Defence.[15] On 20 February 1922, he became the vice-minister and continued to work in this role until early 19226.[16] He translated, edited, and adapted a collection of Russian military statutes into Lithuanian (mainly based on the Code of Military Regulations [ru] of 1869).[17] Although it was an unofficial publication, it was sorely needed for the normal functioning of the military court system in Lithuania.[14] On 1 January 1924, he became the head of the newly established Economic and Financial Department of the Ministry of Defence. This department was in charge of the procurement and budget of the ministry.[17]
After the Lithuanian Seimas elections of May 1926, Papečkys became the Minister of Defence in the government of Mykolas Sleževičius on 16 June. While he sympathized with the Lithuanian Popular Peasants' Union, he was not a member of any political party.[19] He worked on a plan to reorganize the military, reduce military spending by reducing administrative and supporting personnel, and improve military education.[20] Military officers criticized Papečkys for weakening the military and thus threatening Lithuania's independence. In particular, Papečkys came into conflict with generals Kazys Ladiga (who was demoted from the Chief of the General Staff) and Vincas Grigaliūnas-Glovackis [lt] (who was retired from the military).[21] Papečkys was briefly arrested on the night of the 1926 Lithuanian coup d'état to prevent him for organizing resistance.[5] The coup replaced Šleževičius with Augustinas Voldemaras. On 20 December, Papečkys submitted a request to retire from active military service but it was granted only on 16 February 1927.[22] While his request was pending, he returned to the military court.[15]
Papečkys worked as a private lawyer[23] until January 1929, when he became a member of the State Council of Lithuania, eventually becoming its deputy chairman in August 1938.[24] At the State Council, Papečkys worked on drafting the law on amnesty and the criminal code.[25] When the State Council was liquidated after the Soviet occupation of Lithuania in June 1940, Papečkys obtained a job as a consultant at the People's Commissariat of Justice.[13]
Soviet persecution
On 14 June 1941, during the June deportation, Papečkys and his family were arrested by the Soviet authorities. Papečkys was separated from his family in the Kaunas railway station. Papečkys was transported via Starobelsk to a gulag camp near Sosva in the Sverdlovsk Oblast (part of Sevurallag [ru]).[15][26] About 800 men were taken to that camp, including about 250 Lithuanians (seven of which were former government ministers). Due to hunger and inhumane conditions, about a third of the Lithuanians died during the first winter.[26] Others were interrogated and sentenced to death or various prison sentences by the Special Council of the NKVD according to the Article 58 (RSFSR Penal Code). Papečkys was sentenced to 10 years in prison.[27]
However, NKVD accused 15 Lithuanians (including Papečkys and Voldemaras Vytautas Čarneckis [lt]) of organizing a "counter-revolutionary" group that prepared for an armed mutiny inside the gulag. Of this group of prisoners, only Papečkys refused to plead guilty.[28] On 4 November 1942, Papečkys and Čarneckis were shot in an NKVD prison in Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg). They were likely buried in a mass grave at the 12 kilometre marker on the highway to Moscow. In 1990s, Memorial to the Victims of Political Repression [ru] was built at the site with more than 18,000 names of people buried there. However, Papečkys' name is not one of them.[29]
Military ranks
Papečkys held the following ranks in the Lithuanian Army:[30]
In 1923, Papečkys married Teklė Vaitiekaitytė, whom he met in Moscow during World War I. The wedding was officiated by Juozas Tumas-Vaižgantas. Papečkys had two daughters – Ona Daina (born 1924) and Jūra Marija (born 1925).[5]
Papečkys's wife and daughters were deported to the Altai Krai. In summer 1942, they were transferred to Muostakh near Bykovsky on the shores of the Laptev Sea. Teklė, not having learned of her husband's fate, died in 1953 in Yakutsk, while their two daughters successfully returned to Lithuania in 1957.[29][33]
Kulnytė, Birutė, ed. (2006). Lietuvos kariuomenės karininkai 1918–1953 (in Lithuanian). Vol. VI. Vilnius: Lietuvos nacionalinis muziejus. ISBN978-9955-415-67-1.
Kuodys, Modestas (2008). "Juozas Papečkys". In Surgailis, Gintautas (ed.). Lietuvos krašto apsaugos ministrai ir kariuomenės vadai (in Lithuanian). Vol. II. Lietuvos Respublikos krašto apsaugos ministerija. ISBN978-9986-738-98-5.
Maksimaitis, Mindaugas (2006). Valstybės taryba Lietuvos teisinėje sistemoje (1928–1940) (in Lithuanian). Justitia. ISBN9955-616-22-9.