Prometejs (, English translation: Prometheus) was the largest organisation ("educational society", ) of the Latvian diaspora in the interwar Soviet Union. Its members were former Red Latvian riflemen and other Latvian communists and their family members who settled in the USSR after the October Revolution and the Russian Civil War. The organisation was disbanded in the early period of the Great Purge and many of its activists were murdered during the Latvian Operation of the NKVD.
The organisation was established in 1923-24 as a successor to Prometejs Printing House (Izdevniecëba "Prometejs") that had been founded in 1922 â right after the Latvian Department of the People's Commissariat for Nationalities of the USSR had been dissolved.
Education and communist indoctrination were among the priorities of Prometejs. The organisation maintained a publishing house and printed periodicals and literature predominantly in the Latvian language for urban Latvians as well as for ethnic Latvian settlers living in rural areas. Prometejs was among the largest and most important educational organisations of ethnic minorities in the USSR.
The structure of Prometejs included the following sections:
Prometejs published several magazines (including Celtne 'Construction' and Cëà Âas biedrs 'Brother In Arms') and newspapers (including KomunÃÂru Cëà Âa 'Struggle of the Communards' and Darba BÃÂrni 'Working Children'). The organisation owned several factories producing stationery in Moscow in Leningrad, a printing house. In Moscow, Prometejs maintained a Latvian kindergarten, owned estates near Moscow, in Skhodnya and Ilyinskoye,
The organisation maintained Latvian theatres in Moscow, Leningrad and Smolensk. The Moscow-baset theatre ' ('Stage'), established in 1919, was recognised as the best ethnic theatre in the USSR in 1933.
Prometejs was banned and its members purged by the Soviet authorities in July 1937 despite attempts to protect the organisation by high-ranking Latvian Soviet officials like Jà «lijs Danià ¡evskis (chairman of Prometejs) and Roberts Eidemanis who were eventually themselves arrested and executed.
Talks between the Moscow Latvian Cultural Society and the Moscow City Duma began in 2002 to unveil a plaque, commemorating the members of Skatuve and Prometejs that were repressed by the Soviet regime. After initially being rejected by Moscow authorities, with the support of the Embassy of Latvia in Russia the plaque, created by JÃÂnis Strupulis, was unveiled at Strastnoy Boulevard 8 on March 6, 2020 by Latvian ambassador MÃÂris Riekstià Âà ¡ and Moscow city officials.