Raisa Gorbacheva

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Raisa Gorbacheva bigraphy, stories - First lady of Soviet Union

Raisa Gorbacheva : biography

5 January 1932 – 20 September 1999

Raisa Maximovna Gorbacheva ( tr. Raisa Maksimovna Gorbachyova, née Titarenko, Титаре́нко; 5 January 1932 – 20 September 1999) was the wife of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. She raised funds for the preservation of Russian cultural heritage, fostering of new talent, and treatment programs for children’s blood cancer.

Health and death

Gorbacheva suffered a stroke in October 1993. She was diagnosed with leukemia and died on 20 September 1999 at Münster University Hospital in Germany, aged 67. Her body was interred at the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.

Sources

  • , BBC News

Category:1932 births Category:1999 deaths Category:Burials at Novodevichy Cemetery Category:People from Rubtsovsk Category:People from Altai Krai Category:Deaths from leukemia Category:Spouses of Russian and Soviet national leaders Category:Moscow State Pedagogical University alumni Category:Moscow State University alumni Category:Cancer deaths in Germany Category:Russian people of Ukrainian descent Category:Mikhail Gorbachev

Books

Legacy

In 1997, Gorbacheva established the Raisa Maksimovna’s Club, which is meant to galvanize the participation of women in politics. She also supported soft diplomacy and welcomed youth delegations to the Kremlin. Gorbacheva worked to raise awareness of children’s issues and frequently welcomed youth delegations to the Kremlin when her husband could not be present. In 1989, she received a famous painting from "all of the children in the world" from youth ambassador to the former Soviet Union Elizabeth Bissell Miller.

In 2006, her family founded the Raisa Gorbacheva Foundation, which seeks to reduce childhood cancer.

Biography

Raisa Maximovna Titarenko was born in the city of Rubtsovsk in the Altai region of Siberia. She was the eldest of three children of Maxim Andreyevich Titarenko, a railway engineer originally from Chernihiv, Ukraine, and his Siberian wife, Alexandra Petrovna Porada, originally from Veseloyarsk. She spent her childhood in the Ural Mountains, and met her future husband while studying philosophy in Moscow. She earned an advanced degree at the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute, and taught briefly at Moscow State University.

They married in September 1953 and moved to her husband’s home region of Stavropol in southern Russia upon graduation. There, she taught Marxist–Leninist philosophy and defended her sociology research thesis about kolkhoz life. She gave birth in 1958 to their only child, Irina Mikhailovna (married name: Virganskaya; Ири́на Миха́йловна Вирга́нская). When her husband returned to Moscow as a rising Soviet Communist Party official, Gorbacheva took a post of a lecturer at her alma mater, Moscow State University. She left the post when her husband became a leader of the Soviet Union in 1985. Her public appearances beside her husband as first lady were a novelty at home and went a long way in humanizing the country’s image. Her dynamic personality and style caught the attention of Western media and observers.

In 1989, after a personal address by Professor A.G. Rumyantsev and others, Gorbacheva contributed $100,000 to the charity International Association of Hematologists of the World for Children. This and further donations raised by Gorbachevs helped to buy equipment for blood banks and to train Russian doctors abroad. As a result, country-wide children’s leukemia survival rates have improved (Transcripts 2000).

On 1 June 1990, Gorbacheva accompanied U.S. first lady Barbara Bush to Wellesley College in Massachusetts. Both women spoke before the graduating class during the commencement service, touching on the role of women in modern society. All the American TV networks covered the addresses live; CNN provided live cable-TV coverage round the world. The events of the Soviet Coup of 1991 left a scar on Gorbacheva. The political turmoil that followed pushed aside the Gorbachevs’ life from the headlines.