Yunyye Bezbozhniki

(Redirected from Yunyye bezbozhniki)

Yunyye Bezbozhniki: zhurnal shkol'nogo bezbozhnogo aktiva (Russian: «Юные безбожники: журнал школьного безбожного актива»; translation of the name: «Young Atheists: Magazine of Atheist Schoolchildren-Activists», or «Young Godless: Magazine of Godless Schoolchildren-Activists») was a monthly magazine for schoolchildren, an organ of the Central Committee of the Komsomol, the People's Commissariat of Education of the RSFSR and the Central Soviet of the League of Militant Atheists of the USSR.[1]

Yunyye Bezbozhniki (Юные безбожники)
Cover of the magazine «Yunyye bezbozhniki» 1931. No. 3 - 4. May - June
EditorI. A. Flerov
Categoriesantireligious
FrequencyMonthly
FoundedMarch, 1931
Final issueJanuary, 1933
CountrySoviet Union/Russia
Based inMoscow
LanguageRussian

It was published in Moscow from March 1931 to February 1933.[2] A total of 23 issues were printed. Yunyye Bezbozhniki delivered soviet atheistic propaganda and imparted the Party's view on the history of religion and atheism, science, technology, as well as on the atheistic movement among young people in the USSR and abroad. The magazine provided scientific and methodological assistance in the atheistic education of students, and summarized the experience of anti-religious school circles. The editor-in-chief of the magazine was the famous Moscow-based educator and atheist I. A. Flerov.[3]

The Editorial Board of the magazine consisted of: N. Amosov,[4] A. Smirnov,[5] I. Flerov.[6] Writers for the magazine included: L. Kassil, S. Kirsanov, V. Smirnova, M. Gershenzon, G. Gradov,[7] A, Nasimovich, N. Sher[8] and others. The magazine also included works by cartoonists such as: D. Moor, P. Staronosov,[9] A. Korotkin,[10] A. Kozlov[11] and others.

The slogan of the magazine, which was printed above the title of the magazine on the right, was: "The struggle against religion – the struggle for socialism" (Russian: «Борьба против религии — борьба за социализм»). The magazine was published by the Publishing House «Moskovskiy Rabochiy» («Moscow Worker»), OGIZ.[12]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Атеистический словарь / [Абдусамедов А. И., Алейник Р. М., Алиева Б. А. и др. ; под общ. ред. М. П. Новикова]. - 2-е изд., испр. и доп. - Москва : Политиздат, 1985. - 512 с.; 20 см / С. 509
  2. ^ Краткий научно-атеистический словарь / Г. Л. Андреев, А. И. Ардабьев, С. А. Арутюнов и др. И. П. Цамерян (глав. ред.) - 2-е изд., перераб. и доп. - Москва : Наука, 1969. - 798 с.; 20 см. / Юные безбожники / В. Ф. Зыбковец / с. 778
  3. ^ Православие: Словарь атеиста / Под ред. Н. С. Гордиенко. — М.: Политиздат, 1988. — 270[2] с.; 17 см.; ISBN 5-250-00079-7 : / Стр. 269
  4. ^ "Архив Александра Н. Яковлева - Альманах "Россия. ХХ век" - Биографический словарь". www.alexanderyakovlev.org.
  5. ^ Russian: Смирнов, Александр Алексеевич
  6. ^ Юные безбожники реклама типографии издательства «Дер Эмес»
  7. ^ Russian: Градов, Григорий Яковлевич
  8. ^ Russian: Шер, Надежда Сергеевна
  9. ^ Russian: Староносов, Петр Николаевич
  10. ^ Russian: А Короткин
  11. ^ Russian: А. Козлов
  12. ^ Лариса Николаевна Колесова. Детские журналы Советской России: учебное пособие. / Изд. Петрозаводского государственного университета, 1993 / 146 с. / С. 116

References

edit
  • Атеистический словарь / [Абдусамедов А. И., Алейник Р. М., Алиева Б. А. и др. ; под общ. ред. М. П. Новикова]. - 2-е изд., испр. и доп. - Москва : Политиздат, 1985. - 512 с.; 20 см / С. 509