Jerzy Putrament (born November 14, 1910 in Minsk – died June 23, 1986 in Warsaw) was a Polish writer, poet, editor, publicist and politician.
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Jerzy Putrament was born into a family with patriotic traditions. His mother was Russian and adhered to Eastern Orthodox Church, as did Jerzy. In the Second Polish Republic, where he studied at the Stefan Batory University in Wilno, he at first leaned towards the right-wing endecja faction, and became a member of the Camp of Great Poland;,[1] later he supported the communists, for which he was arrested and put on a trial.[2] After the Soviet invasion of Poland, he remained in the territories annexed by the Soviet Union and worked as a communist functionary (lived in Lviv). At the same time, his mother and sister were deported to Siberia. Having fled to Moscow after the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, he became one of the founders of the Union of Polish Patriots[2] and a war correspondent and a political commissar in the Polish Army in the East. At that time he wrote much pro-Soviet propaganda.[3]
In the People's Republic of Poland, he became a writer, publishing many works supporting the ideals of communism, and a politician. He became an editor of two literary journals (Miesięcznik Literacki from 1966 to 1971 and Literatura from 1955 to 1968), and as such he had significant influence on Polish cultural policy.[2] He was a Polish ambassador to Switzerland from 1945 to 1947,[2] an ambassador to France from 1947 to 1950,[2] a deputy to the Polish Parliament from 1952 to 1961,[2] and eventually member of the Central Committee of the Polish United Workers Party from 1964 to 1981).[2]
He was a president of the Polish Chess Federation from 1954 to 1957 and 1963 to 1973.
He is "Gamma" in Czesław Miłosz's book The Captive Mind.
Altogether Putrament wrote some 50 fictional works.[2]
He published his first works (poetry) before the war; his poetry anthologies (Wczoraj powrót, 1935 ("Yesterday the Return") and Droga leśna, 1938 ("Forest Road") were well received.[2] Their main themes were revolutionary politics and beauty of the countryside.[2]
His first novel was Rzeczywistość (1947; "Reality") which draws on his experiences of the trial for communism activism in Poland before the war.[2] His most renown writings include the political novels Rozstaje (1954; “At the Crossroads”) and Małowierni (1967; “Those of Little Faith”) and the wartime novel Bołdyn (1969).[2] Bołdyń was filmed in 1982 by Czesław and Ewa Petelska.