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Title: Veikko Leväaho
Author: Antti Rautiainen
Date: February 21, 2009
Language: en
Topics: obituary, Finland
Source: Retrieved on 3rd November 2021 from https://anttirautiainen.livejournal.com/22116.html

Antti Rautiainen

Veikko Leväaho

Veikko Leväaho was an anarchist in Finland at times where movement was

practically not existing in country. He has told that he first become

interested on anarchism when listening radio broadcasts on events of

Spanish Revolution when he was 12 years old. However left-wing views

also came from family background — his father was a vegetarian and

theosophist. Leväaho was born in St. Petersburg, his parents were from

big Finnish community of the city, but eventually they emigrated to

Finland in 1928 due to harshening political situation in Soviet Union.

During Second World war, he already had an established world view. He

was serving as a meteorologist in air forces. In April of 1944 he

refused to read a blessing of god in an evening ceremony, he argued that

as an atheist this would be insulting towards his fellows in service. He

was given one month water and bread-sentence, which he served in a

prison in Kuopio.

There were few prominent anarchists in Finland at the time — Harry Järv

only became anarchist after emigration to Sweden after war, former

veteran of anarchist armed struggle 1906–1909 Kustaa Liukonen had become

a left-wing social-democrat for a long time ago, just as former wobbly

and a longtime leader of Seamen’s union in Finland Niilo Wälläri.

After war, he was involved in establishing of union of workers in air

transport. Later on he was working as a journalist and an inventor.

In 1960’s, there was a brief revival of anarchism in Finland, and

Leväaho become one of the central people in “anarchist club” discussion

group. He was also involved in 1960’s counter-culture magazine Tähti

(Star). Critical University (Kriittinen korkeakoulu), another informal

think tank had anarchist research group which Leväaho was leading

1969–1974. Leväaho also participated to discussion club “Friends of the

Future”-association formed by the 1980’s alternative movement.

Leväaho’s аnarchism was pacifist and individualist and he did not

believed in any mass action, thus besides his pioneering role he was

practically isolated from the new anarchist movement which began to

emerge in Finland from late 1980’s onwards, as new movement was heavily

into activism and much influenced from people frustrated with the

Communist Party. There were few links, such as anarchist seminar in Oulu

1984 which was also attended by people active in 1980’s squatting and

zine movement, but eventually these links vanished.