Education
Between 1925 to 1929, he studied in the department of Ukrainian history at the Kharkiv Institute of Red Professors.
Between 1925 to 1929, he studied in the department of Ukrainian history at the Kharkiv Institute of Red Professors.
He supported the Soviet Ukrainization during the 1920s which probably led to his arrest and execution during the Great Purge in the 1930s. After studies at a rural school in the big village of Kamianske, Yekaterinoslav Governorate (popular ~20,000), he started to work at a railway workshop office. He was fired from his job in 1918 after he had taken part in anti-Hetmanate actions.
In 1919, he joined the staff of the first volunteer Moscow regiment and took part in revolutionary events.
In early 1920, he joined the Bolshevik party and the Revolutionary committee in Kamianske. He later moved to Poltava where he worked as a political instructor, secretary and chairman of a regional board. from 1924 to 1925, as an editor of Chervonyi shliakh (Red Road) in Kharkiv.
After graduating, he became the director of the Derzhlitvydav publishing house (State Publishing House). Even though Epik had continued to support the Communist Party, after the abrupt reversion of the Soviet Ukrainization in the early 1930s, he suffered from the purges.
In early 1935, he was sentenced to ten years of forced labour and sent to a Solovki prison camp.
He was, afterwards, disappointed and stopped writing. Epik was posthumously rehabilitated in 1956 by the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics.
During the period of 1922–1924, Epik worked within the regional board of the Ukrainian branch of Communist Youth League and
He was a member of several Ukrainian literary organizations such as the Pluh, Prolitfront and VAPLITE (Free Academy of Proletarian Literature). These organizations gathered many young members of the Ukrainian intelligentsia, who in the 1930s suffered severely during the Great Purge. He was arrested on December 5, 1934, accused of being a Ukrainian nationalist and a member of a secret terrorist organization.
Epik was executed on November 3, 1937 in a locality named Sandarmokh near Medvezhyegorsk, Karelian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, together with 289 other members of the Ukrainian intelligentsia such as Mykola Kulish, Valerian Pidmohylnyi, Yulian Shpol, Valerian Polishuk, Les Kurbas, Myroslav Irchan, Mykola Zerov.