More than 150 authors contributed articles to
Draugija before World War I. Its authors included
Jonas Basanavičius,
Pranas Būčys,
Kazimieras Būga,
Pranas Dovydaitis,
Liudas Gira,
Motiejus Gustaitis,
Lazdynų Pelėda,
Petras Leonas,
Maironis,
Pranas Mašiotas,
Jurgis Matulaitis-Matulevičius,
Vincas Mykolaitis-Putinas,
Juozas Purickis,
Justinas Staugaitis,
Stasys Šalkauskis,
Šatrijos Ragana,
Juozas Tumas-Vaižgantas,
Augustinas Voldemaras,
Vydūnas.
Social issues The magazine devoted significant attention to issues in education. Russian public schools could accommodate only about a quarter of all children but Lithuanians were allowed to organize their own private schools only after the
Russian Revolution of 1905. As new schools were organized by various parishes as well as the
Saulė Society in
Kovno Governorate and
Žiburys Society in
Suwałki Governorate,
Draugija published numerous articles on the state of education in the country and plans for improving it, discussed school curriculum, teaching methods, child psychology, debated Catholic and secular approaches to education, reported on education practices in other countries (United States, Scandinavia, Switzerland, Ukraine, etc.), popularized new scientific achievements and explained science topics (e.g. about
paleontology, comets, telepathy). The Russian Revolution also brought
class conflict and other
social issues to the forefront. As Lithuanians organized the first societies for workers (e.g. Workers' Society of St. Joseph founded by
Konstantinas Olšauskas or
Society of Saint Zita), the magazine published articles debating the role of the Catholic Church, charities, mutual aid societies in addressing social issues, discussing
socialism and
bolshevism as well as broader concepts of
sociology,
eugenics,
political economy, addressing more specific issues of
Lithuanian emigration to United States or
teetotalism.
Literature, language, history The magazine promoted the preservation of cultural heritage and development of the
Lithuanian cultural revival.
Draugija published literary works and their critical reviews. Each issue began with poems by known and newly discovered Lithuanian authors as well as translated poems of foreign authors such as
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
Victor Hugo,
Alexander Pushkin,
Adam Mickiewicz. The magazine also published a few short stories by
Lazdynų Pelėda,
Šatrijos Ragana,
Liudas Gira, , and others. It published four dramas:
Hamlet by
William Shakespeare, a comedy by
Roderich Benedix, a drama by
Paul Heyse, and historical drama
Kęstučio mirtis (Death of
Kęstutis) by
Maironis. Almost every more substantial new literary work in Lithuanian was critically reviewed by
Draugija, frequently by its editor Jakštas. These reviews were compiled and published separately in two-volume
Mūsų naujoji literatūra (Our New Literature) in 1923. Other articles were devoted to reviewing works of certain writers, including
Jonas Krikščiūnas (Jovaras),
Maironis,
Žemaitė,
Jonas Biliūnas, etc.
Draugija also published historical studies on the
Lithuanian literature, including on
Dionizas Poška,
Antanas Baranauskas, ,
Aušra.
Juozas Gabrys published a synthesis that covered not only individual authors, but also the
Lithuanian Chronicles and
Lithuanian folklore. A few articles were published on foreign authors (
Dante Alighieri,
Fyodor Dostoevsky,
Xenophon). The magazine frequently published articles dealing with the Lithuanian language, its history, standardization,
syntax,
lexicon, often written by linguist
Kazimieras Būga. In particular, the magazine dealt with identification of various
loan words and
barbarisms in Catholic texts and their replacement with Lithuanian equivalents. After the death of linguist
Kazimieras Jaunius, one entire issue was dedicated to him. The magazine also published articles on the
philosophy of language and
Esperanto (translated from a work by
Jan Baudouin de Courtenay).
Draugija also published articles on topics from the
history of Lithuania, for example about King
Mindaugas,
Battle of Grunwald,
Reformation in Lithuania,
Lithuanian press ban. Jakštas wrote numerous obituaries.
Other topics Draugija supported Catholic ideas and worldview but also embraced reforms and progress and criticized ultra-conservatives. It published philosophical articles on the place of the Catholic faith in science and culture as well as articles on topics in religious philosophy, for example
theosophy,
mysticism,
asceticism,
evolution, logic,
Polish Messianism. In politics, the periodical supported the
Christian democracy and the
Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party though it claimed to be a cultural and not a political magazine. It published some broader thoughts and comments on political topics, for example an article by
Augustinas Voldemaras on the proposed Lithuania's autonomy, the
League of Nations, human rights, democracy,
Constituent Assembly of Lithuania. Each issue had about 8 to 12 pages devoted to overview of Polish and Russian press on Lithuania.
Draugija denounced any Polish plans for cultural or political union with Lithuania. A specific issue discussed several times was the Polish language used in church services. The magazine, in a way, it attempted to catalog Lithuanian publications and periodicals. Works of fiction received critical reviews, while periodicals were summarized presenting key ideas.
Draugija presented content summaries of periodicals published in Lithuania and abroad in 1907–1914:
Vilniaus žinios,
Lietuvos žinios,
Viltis,
Šaltinis,
Nedėldienio skaitymas,
Vienybė,
Lietuvos ūkininkas,
Skardas,
Katalikas,
Žvaigždė,
Kova,
Draugas,
Vadovas,
Rygos garsas. It also published summaries of Polish, French, German periodicals as well as of foreign coverage of Lithuania.
Draugija published a chronicle of social and cultural events in Lithuania. ==References==