Adolf Taimi was born and raised in
Saint Petersburg. He joined the
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in 1902. As a member of the party's Bolshevik wing, Taimi was first arrested in 1906. He was deported to the city of
Nikolsky, Leningrad Oblast. Later he fled back to Saint Petersburg where he met
Nadezhda Krupskaya, who sent him to
Helsinki because of his linguistic skills. In Helsinki, Taimi worked in a
Russian Army shipyard and was active in the Bolshevik Military Committee. He also had contact with
Finnish Social Democrat radical circles. In 1912 Taimi was arrested again and exiled to
Siberia for four years. During his exile Taimi studied Marxist literature. After the
February Revolution Taimi returned to Saint Petersburg, where the Bolsheviks sent him back to Helsinki in April 1917. In Finland, Taimi's mission was to make contact with Bolshevik soldiers and Finnish Social Democrats. He took part in the Social Democratic Party conference in June and November. Taimi urged Finns to revolution in his speeches. In December, he encouraged the
Labour Guards to operate independently if necessary. In January, Taimi was elected an "additional member" of the party's committee. He worked all the while in close cooperation with the Bolshevik-led Helsinki Council. During the Civil War Taimi was the delegate for internal affairs of the
Finnish People's Delegation in which he had connections to the Red Guards. When the delegate for Internal Affairs, Supreme Commander of the Red Guard
Eero Haapalainen, was deposed because of heavy drinking, his replacements were Taimi,
Eino Rahja and
Evert Eloranta. After the end of the civil war, Taimi fled to
Soviet Russia where he was one of the founding members of the
Communist Party of Finland in 1918. In 1923 he allied with
Otto Wille Kuusinen and
Kullervo Manner against Eino Rahjaa who was accused of being unsuitable for the party leadership. He was elected to the
Central Committee of the Communist Party in 1924. Taimi worked in the underground organizations of the Finnish Communist Party in Finland in 1922–1923 and 1927–1928. He was also active in the
Comintern. He was arrested in Finland in 1928 and received a long prison sentence. Taimi was released after the
Winter War along with
Toivo Antikainen. Both were deported back to the Soviet Union. Taimi settled in the
Karelo-Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic. Occupied by prison time and disputes with other Finnish Communists, he was not able to rise to the higher ranks of the Communist Party of Finland. Taimi published his memoirs in 1954 in Finnish. ==References==