Background
GOLUBKOV, Aleksandr was born on June 13, 1880 in Moscow. Son of a bookkeeper.
GOLUBKOV, Aleksandr was born on June 13, 1880 in Moscow. Son of a bookkeeper.
1903 graduate Medical Faculty, Moscow University.
1900 joined rcvol Marxist organisation. 1901 arrested for involvement in student revol movement. 1903 joined Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party Bolshevik faction.
After graduate physician, Smolensk Province Rural Hospital. At same time associate, from 1904 head, local tech bureau, Russian Section, Central Committee, Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party. December 1904-spring 1905 in prison.
After release subject to travel restrictions. From 1905 member, Moscow Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party Committee. Company-founder and ed, Bolshevik newspaper Vperyod.
1906 arrested again; 1907 went abroad but returned to Russia six months later, where be became acting secretary, Saint St. Petersburg "Group of Five” commissioned by the Central Committee, Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party to conduct rcvol work in Russia. December 1908 attended All-Russian Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party Conference in Paris. 1909 arrested again: 2 October 1910 exiled to Minusinsk, Eastern Siberia, where he opened a medical practice and printed and distributed Bolshevik propaganda.
After 1917 February Revol returned to Moscow. As member, All-Russian Rural League helped to organize health sendee. Dcleg, 1st Congress of Soviets, Petrograd.
From October 1917 member, Moskvorech’ye Revol Committee. After October Rcvol for a while Commissar of Health, Moscow Province. Member, Council of Doctors' Collegia.
Campaigned against the Pirogov Memorial Social of Russian Physicians on the pages of the journal Izvestiya sovetskoy meditsiny. From July 1918 Collegium member, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Commissariat of Health. Deputy chairman, Russian Red Cross Social.
1930-1936 co-ed, Bol’shaya metitsinskaya entsiklopediya (Large Medical Encyclopedia) (1st ed). Board chairman, State Medical Publ House.
Religion is bad because it forces people to rely on outside authority, rather than becoming self-reliant.
Every Soviet citizen has rights to express his or her opinion, but it should be in accordance with the general interests of the society.
Communist Party member from 1903.