Timofiej Moos
Timofiej Kornićowicz Łos, born in 1953 in the village of Orepice in Breslau, was a Russian educator, political and social activist during the Second Polish Republic. >
He graduated from the pedagogical seminar in Świsłoczy, where he became a teacher at the Ogorodniki school (he also ran a parochial choir there) and then later Lithuanian Kamieniec. Then he entered the faculty of literature and language of the Russian university in Petrograd, which he graduated in the spring of 1915. During his studies he was a member of the Belarusian literary circle of students. Then he worked as a teacher of Russian language, philosophy and singing in a male gymnasium in the vicinity. After the Bolshevik revolution of 1917, he came to Brest, where in 1921 he became head of the Russian gymnasium. At the same time he became involved in the activities of the local Russian national movement. In 1922, he became a member of the United Nations Regional Committee for the Bloc of National Minorities. In 1923, he retired from his current position due to a dispute over attempts to Ukrainianize a Russian gymnasium. He remained in the grammar school as a teacher of literature and Russian. He taught middle school students the courses of sexology. From 1928, he headed the local branch of the Russian National Union. He was unsuccessful in the elections to the Sejm. In September 1932, due to the intervention of the Polish authorities, he was released from work in a Russian gymnasium. In January 1934 he became a lecturer in the parish church in Drohiczyn Poleski. In March of this year he went to the Orthodox Church in the village of Stiepanki in the Kobryn district. At the end of 1935 he was accused of assaulting a child, but was not convicted. He lost his job. From 1938, after the death of his father, ran a family farm Antonin. After the occupation of the eastern part of Poland by the Red Army in the autumn of 1939, he became headmaster of the elementary school in the village of Orepice in 1940. At present, there is a street in his village and a museum dedicated to his life.
Biography of Timofie K. Łosia (Russian)
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