Tadas Blinda (1846–1877) was
a Lithuanian
folk hero of the 19th
century. He was a subject of several popular books, plays,
and movies and is often compared to
Robin
Hood.
Biography
He was
born in the village of Kinčiuliai,
Telšiai
County
, in the region of Samogitia, and inherited his father's 40 hectares
at the age of 20. He then married, had three daughters, and
became the village
elder. There are several
versions of the turning point in his life that led to his later
career.
One story has it that he participated in the
1863 uprising, and was sentenced to
exile in Siberia
.
Another has it that his landlord, Duke
Oginskis, ordered him to flog some serfs, became
angry when he refused, and then struck Blinda with a whip. Blinda
responded in a flash by thrashing the nobleman.
When Blinda chose to live outside the law, he gathered a band of
followers in the dense forests near
Byvainė. According to his admirers, he was a
latter-day
Robin Hood – he stole from the
rich and gave to the poor. His detractors argued that he stole from
the poor as well. Other stories have him disguising himself as a
priest and collecting alms that he then gave away. Many of the
tales claim that he buried a treasure in the forest, which remains
undiscovered to this day.
The circumstances surrounding his death have also been an object of
contention. The popularly-held version was that Duke Oginskis was
finally able to gain revenge by organizing the local authorities
and murdering him. In 1993 an archivist uncovered police records
indicating that he was
lynched as a horse
thief on
April 22,
1877
and buried in an
unconsecrated corner
of a cemetery in
Luokė. No traces of this
burial have been found.
Dramatizations
His life was first formally dramatized in 1907 by the Lithuanian
writers
Lazdynų Pelėda and
Gabrielius
Landsbergis-Žemkalnis.
The play, entitled "Blinda, the Leveller of
the World", presented him as a champion of the common people,
battling the Polish
landlords
and the Russian
Empire
that governed Lithuania, and was enthusiastically
received.
The legend lived on, and was made into a popular film in 1973.
It
featured a handsome leading man, Vytautas Tomkus, dramatic hand-to-hand
combat and feats of horsemanship, and the beautiful scenery of
Aukštaitija
National Park
– it was an immediate success. Although the
film was released with the approval of the
Soviet government, many of its viewers
interpreted the movie as a veiled reference to the
Lithuanian partisans who, living in the
forests, continued to resist the Soviet occupation during the 1940s
and 1950s.
Blinda's
life was recently dramatized in an eponymous rock musical by
Andrius Mamontovas that debuted
in Vilnius
in
2004. A local railway tour re-enacts a train robbery by
Blinda, and
Blindos beer by
Švyturys-Utenos alus appeared in
the 2000s.
References
- The rock musical Tadas Blinda
- Narrow-gauge railroad excursion featuring a Blinda train
robbery re-enactment
External links