Frans Johan ”Janne” Myyryläinen (30 December 1881, Viipuri—8 May 1938, Petrozavodsk) was a Finnish Red Guard during the Finnish civil war and journalist who wrote under the pen name Juuso Matero. He was also a Red Guardian in Kainuu and an officer Guardian in Soviet Russia. He is best known as Jahvetti Moilanen, the leader of the 1922 pork mutiny or liquor rebellion.

Frans Myyryläinen

Early life

edit

He was born in Vyborg.[1]

Career

edit

Myyryläinen worked as forest guardian and as a shopkeeper in Kainuu and as an inspector in the early 20th century. He became member in the Kainuu red guards. The opposition White Guard said that Myyryläinen was a dangerous man.

During the civil war in 1918 Myyryläinen was arrested and tried. His punishment was two years in prison and he lost his civic confidence[clarification needed] for 12 years but escaped and was recaptured.

On his way to the Hennala camp in Lahti Myyryläinen was able to escape a second time and this time to Soviet Union. In Russia, he was in a red guard officer school. Later, he organized an underground movement in Kainuu.

Rebellion

edit

Myyryläinen is known as the leader of the pork mutiny in 1922 in Salla and in Savukoski. Using the name Jahvetti Moilanen, he stood on a crate that had formerly contained pork and delivered a speech that called the 'Declaration of Battle of the Red Guerrilla Battalion of the North'. After the speech, some 300 workers joined the battalion and were armed and given money. The Battalion then returned to the border. On its way, it robbed a group of border guards and other workplaces. On February 7, the battalion, by that time numbering 240, crossed back to the Soviet Union. Information on the incident was received at Rovaniemi only on February 5 and the battalion slipped away before a group of the White Guard arrived. In the Soviet Union, Myyryläinen continued as a Red Army teacher in the Russian part of Karelia. Later, he worked as journalist in Petrozavodsk using the name Juuso Matero.

Personal life

edit

Myyryläinen was married two twice and had three children from his second marriage.

Arrest, death and legacy

edit

During the Great Purges, Myyryläinen was arrested on May 5 and was executed on May 8, 1938, perhaps in Petrozavodsk.

During the Khrushchev thaw, a military tribune overturned the verdict against Myyryläinen on 21 May 1957.

The location of his grave is unknown.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Tuntsan Pubi Sallassa on kaukana kaikesta ja sellaisen taipaleen takana, että ajat vain omalla vastuullasi, ja kauan – Näin sinne pääsee". Apu360 (in Finnish). 3 June 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2024.