Background
Blekaitis was born in Kellomäki, Finland, (which at the time was still part of the Russian Empire) while his family was on vacation. His father worked in the Russian czar"s army.
Blekaitis was born in Kellomäki, Finland, (which at the time was still part of the Russian Empire) while his family was on vacation. His father worked in the Russian czar"s army.
Vytautas Magnus University.
The Blekaitis family lived in Saint St. Petersburg. However, the Russian Revolution erupted just months after Blekaitis"s birth. The Blekaitis family escaped the effects of the revolution in Saint St. Petersburg by fleeing to the family"s hometown of Birstonas, Lithuania.
(Lithuania gained independence from Russia following the Russian Revolution).
Blekaitis learned Polish, his mother"s native tongue, as well as Russian and Lithuanian. Throughout the rest of his life Blekaitis would continue to learn new languages.
He eventually also learned English, French and German. Blekaitis earned a degree in theater from Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas, Lithuania, and began work as an actor and director
Blekaitis was nearly sent to a concentration camp in Liepāja, Latvia with other Lithuanian intellectuals near the end of World World War World War II However, with the advance of the Soviet army, Blekaitis was forced to flee to a refugee camp in Germany.
While in Germany, Blekaitis enrolled in a Freiburg art school. He helped organize acting troupes and toured several refugee camps throughout Germany. Blekaitis immigrated to the United States in 1949 and settled in New York City.
He produced Russian theater in Brooklyn and other ethnic theater programs.
Blekaitis joined the Voice of America in New York in 1952. He moved to the Washington, District of Columbia area when the Voice of America moved its headquarters in 1954.
He worked in the VOA"s Lithuanian service from 1952 until his retirement in 1987. He became a senior editor at the VOA. Blekaitis continued writing while in the United States.
He was noted for translating works by Ivar Ivask, Czesław Miłosz, and Joseph Brodsky to English.
He published two books of original poetry, as well as a Lithuanian memoir.