Background and youth Gromyko was born to a poor "semi-peasant, semi-worker"
Belarusian family in the
Belarusian village of Staryye Gromyki, near
Gomel, on 18 July 1909. Gromyko's father, Andrei Matveyevich, worked as a seasonal worker in a local
factory. Andrei Matveyevich was not a very educated man, having only attended four years of school, but knew how to read and write. He had fought in the
Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905. Gromyko's mother, Olga Yevgenyevna, came from a poor peasant family in the neighbouring city of Zhelezniki. She attended school only for a short period of time as, when her father died, she left to help her mother with the
harvest. Gromyko grew up near the district town of
Vetka where most of the
inhabitants were devoted
Old Believers in the
Russian Orthodox Church. Gromyko's own village was also predominantly
religious, but Gromyko started doubting the
supernatural at a very early age. His first dialog on the subject was with his grandmother Marfa, who answered his inquiry about
God with "Wait until you get older. Then you will understand all this much better". According to Gromyko, "Other adults said basically the same thing" when talking about religion. Gromyko's neighbor at the time, Mikhail Sjeljutov, was a
freethinker and introduced Gromyko to new non-religious ideas and told Gromyko that
scientists were beginning to doubt the existence of God. From the age of nine, after the
Bolshevik revolution, Gromyko started reading
atheist propaganda in
flyers and
pamphlets. At the age of thirteen (13), Gromyko became a member of the
Komsomol and held
anti-religious speeches in the village with his friends as well as promoting
Communist values. The news that
Germany had
attacked the
Russian Empire in August 1914 came without warning to the local population. This was the first time, as Gromyko notes, that he felt "
love for his country". His father, Andrei Matveyevich, was again
conscripted into the
Imperial Russian Army and served for three years on the southwestern front, under the leadership of General
Aleksei Brusilov. Andrei Matveyevich returned home on the eve of the 1917
October Revolution in Russia. Gromyko was elected First Secretary of the local
Komsomol chapter at the beginning of 1923. Following
Vladimir Lenin's death in 1924, the villagers asked Gromyko what would happen in the leader's absence. Gromyko remembered a communist slogan from the heyday of the October Revolution: "The revolution was carried through by Lenin and his
helpers." He then told the villagers that Lenin was dead, but "his aides, the Party, still lived on."
Education and party membership When he was young, Gromyko's mother Olga told him that he should leave his home town to become an educated man. Gromyko followed his mother's advice and, after finishing seven years of
primary school and
vocational education in Gomel, he moved to
Borisov to attend
technical school. Gromyko became a member of the
All-Union Communist Party Bolsheviks in 1931, something he had dreamed of since he learned about the "difference between a poor farmer and a landowner, a worker and a capitalist". Gromyko was voted in as secretary of his party cell at his first party conference and used most of his weekends doing volunteer work. Gromyko received a very small
stipend to live on, but still had a strong nostalgia for the days when he worked as a volunteer. It was about this time that Gromyko met his future wife,
Lydia Grinevich. Grinevich was the daughter of a Belarusian peasant family and came from
Kamenki, a small village to the west of
Minsk. She and Gromyko had two children,
Anatoly and Emiliya. After studying in
Borisov for two years, Gromyko was appointed
principal of a
secondary school in
Dzyarzhynsk, where he taught, supervised the school, and continued his studies. One day, a representative from the
Central Committee of the
Communist Party of Byelorussia offered him an opportunity to do post-graduate work in Minsk. Gromyko traveled to Minsk for an interview with the head of the university, I.M. Borisevich, who explained that a new post-graduate program had been formed for training in economics; Gromyko's record in education and social work made him a desirable candidate. Gromyko advised Borisevich that he would have difficulty living on a meager student stipend. Borisevich assured him that on finishing the program, his salary would be at the party's top pay grade – "a decent living wage". Gromyko accepted the offer, moving his family to Minsk in 1933. Gromyko and the other post-graduates were invited to an anniversary reception at which, as recounted in Gromyko's
Memoirs: We were amazed to find ourselves treated as equals and placed at their table to enjoy what for us was a sumptuous feast. We realised then that not for nothing did the Soviet state treat its scientists well: evidently science and those who worked in it were highly regarded by the state. After that day of pleasantry, Gromyko for the first time in his life wanted to enter
higher education, but without warning, Gromyko and his family were moved in 1934 to
Moscow, settling in the northeastern
Alexeyevsky District. In 1936, after another three years of studying economics, Gromyko became a researcher and lecturer at the
Soviet Academy of Sciences. His area of expertise was the
US economy, and he published several books on the subject. Gromyko assumed his new job would be a permanent one, but in 1939 he was called upon by a
Central Committee Commission which selected new personnel to work in
diplomacy. (The
Great Purge of 1938 opened many positions in the diplomatic corps.) Gromyko recognised such familiar faces as
Vyacheslav Molotov and
Georgy Malenkov. A couple of days later he was transferred from the Academy of Sciences to the
diplomatic service.
Ambassador and World War II and
James Byrnes at the
Potsdam Conference in July 1945 In early 1939, Gromyko started working for the
People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs in Moscow. He became the Head of the Department of Americas, and because of his position Gromyko met with
United States ambassador to the Soviet Union Lawrence Steinhardt. Gromyko believed Steinhardt to be "totally uninterested in
creating good relations between the US and the USSR" and that Steinhardt's predecessor
Joseph Davies was more "colourful" and seemed "genuinely interested" in improving the relations between the two countries. Davies received the
Order of Lenin for his work in trying to improve diplomatic relations between the US and the USSR. After heading the Americas department for 6 months, Gromyko was called upon by
Joseph Stalin, the Soviet leader. Stalin started the conversation by telling Gromyko that he would be sent to the Soviet embassy in the United States to become
second-in-command. "The Soviet Union," Stalin said, "should maintain reasonable relations with such a powerful country like the United States, especially in light of the growing
fascist threat".
Vyacheslav Molotov contributed with some minor modifications but mostly agreed with what Stalin had said. "How are your English skills improving?," Stalin asked; "Comrade Gromyko, you should pay a visit or two to an American church and listen to their sermons. Priests usually speak correct English with good accents. Do you know that the Russian revolutionaries, when they were abroad, always followed this practice to improve their skills in foreign languages?" Gromyko was quite amazed about what Stalin had just told him but he never visited an American church. Gromyko had never been abroad before and, to get to the United States, he had to travel via
airplane through
Romania,
Bulgaria and
Yugoslavia to
Genoa,
Italy, where he boarded a ship to the United States. He later wrote in his
Memoirs that
New York City was a good example of how humans, by the "means of wealth and technology are able to create something that is totally alien to our nature". He further noticed the New York working districts, which in his own opinion, were proof of the inhumanity of
capitalism and of the system's greed. Gromyko met and consulted with most of the senior officers of the
United States government during his first days and succeeded
Maxim Litvinov as ambassador to the United States in 1943. In his
Memoirs Gromyko wrote fondly of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt even though he believed him to be a representative of the
bourgeoisie class. During his time as ambassador, Gromyko met prominent personalities such as British actor
Charlie Chaplin, and British economist
John Maynard Keynes. Gromyko was a Soviet delegate to the
Tehran,
Dumbarton Oaks,
Yalta and
Potsdam conferences. In 1943, the same year as the
Tehran Conference, the USSR
established diplomatic relations with Cuba and Gromyko was appointed the Soviet ambassador to
Havana. Gromyko claimed that the accusations brought against Roosevelt by American
right-wingers, that he was a
socialist sympathizer, were absurd. While he started out as a member delegate, Gromyko later became the head of the Soviet delegation to the
San Francisco conference after Molotov's departure. When he later returned to Moscow to celebrate the Soviet victory in the
Great Patriotic War, Stalin commended him saying a good diplomat was "worth two or three armies at the front". ==At the helm of Soviet foreign policy==