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Karel Destovnik Kajuh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Karel Destovnik Kajuh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Karel Destovnik Kajuh (19 December 1922 - 22 February 1944) was a Slovene poet, translator and national hero.


[edit] Life and work

Kajuh was born in the Lower Styrian town of Šoštanj as the eldest child of Jože Destovnik and Marija Vasle. The sobriquet Kajuh comes from his grandfather's birthplace in Skorno near Šmartno ob Paki.

After finishing primary school in 1933, he enrolled in the prestigious Celje High School. In 1934 he became member of the Young Communist League of Yugoslavia. He was expelled from school because of »participation in the dissemination of communist ideas«, as was stated in the official explanation. He continued schooling in Maribor.

Kajuh started writing poems before World War Two. He began publishing his poems in the youth literary magazine Slovenska mladina. Some of his best poems from this period with social, political and love themes were published in this journal: Otrok slovenski (Slovene Child), Slutnja (Premonition), Norec (Madman), Pesem delavca o svoji ljubici (A Worker's Poem on his Beloved One), Vseh mrtvih dan (Day of All the Dead), Otrokovo pismo Jezuščku (A Child's Letter to Jesus), Novoletni sonet (A New Year's Sonnet), Kmečki otrok vprašuje (The Question of Peasant's Child), Moj stric (My Uncle), etc. Kajuh was also a prolific translator. Expecially noteworthy are his translations from Czech, particularly of the authors Jiří Wolker, František Halas, Ivan Olbracht and Jaroslav Seifert.

He was arrested by the Yugoslav authorities at the end of January 1941 and sent to prison in Ivanjica in Serbia, where he remained until mid February. On 6 April 1941, the first day of Axis invasion of Yugoslavia Kajuh volunteered to the Yugoslav Army defend his country. On April 28 of the same year, after the Nazi German occupation of norhern Slovenia, he was arrested by the Gestapo and imprisoned in Slovenj Gradec. He was released in May and he hid in the Savinja Valley before escaping to Ljubljana, where he joined the Slovene resistance forces.

His revolutionary and simple love poetry was very popular among Slovene partisans. He used his poetic talent in order to mobilize people into fighting against the occupying forces and inspiring them hope of a return to freedom. The first comprehensive collection of his poems was published in 1945 in Ljubljana, edited by Mile Klopčič.

Kajuh was in touch with his contemporary Slovene literary scene. He maintained contacts with renowned authors such as Tone Seliškar, Matej Bor and Prežihov Voranc. He also met with Oton Župančič who was considered at the time to be the most important poet in Slovene language. Although the details of their meetings remain unknown, the young poet apparently left a huge impression on Župančič, who stated his enthusiasm for Kajuh's work.

After joining the Partisans, Kajuh became the leader of the cultural section in his military unit, the XIVth Slovene Partisan Division. On 6 January 1944, the Division left the region of White Carniola in the Province of Ljubljana where it was stationed in order to reach the Lower Styria through the Croatian soil. They reached their final destination on 6 February of the same year, facing a massive German offensive and a bitterly cold winter. The cultural section of the unit was based in a house in the small locality of Žlebnik. The house was attacked by a German patrol and Kajuh was one of the first to be killed.

On 21 July 1953, Kajuh was declared a national hero of Yugoslavia.

A primary school in Ljubljana and the Kajuh Literary Prize are named after him, as are several streets and squares throughout Slovenia. In Celje, a whole town district is named after him. Together with Matej Bor and Edvard Kocbek, Kajuh is regarded as one of the most important poets of the Anti-Fascist Liberation War in the Slovene Lands.

[edit] Sources

[edit] External links


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