Following the end of World War II, Zimyanin quickly climbed the ranks of the
Communist Party of Byelorussia, becoming Second Secretary of the BCP in February 1949. The First Secretary,
Nikolai Patolichev, was a Russian, leaving Zimyanin, then aged 35, as the highest-ranking native official in Belarus. In 1952, he became a full member of the
Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
Khrushchev period In 1953, soon after the death of
Joseph Stalin, Zimyanin was suddenly removed from his position and transferred to the staff of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. This was a fall in status, and resulted in his being dropped from the Central Committee after the 20th Party Congress in 1956. It was all the more abrupt for the fact - not publicized at the time - that in June 1953 he was briefly elevated to the post of First Secretary of the BCP. This was part of a drive initiated in Moscow by the chief of police,
Lavrentiy Beria, to promote native cadres in the non-Russian SSRs. According to one account, Zimyanin traveled to Minsk, and delivered a devastating report on Patolichev's record while Patolichev sat in silence, having already prepared to leave Belarus, when a message came through from Moscow to say that Beria had been arrested, and Patolichev reinstated. Zimyanin made a comeback in April 1965, as Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs, and then in September 1976 as Editor of
Pravda soon after BCP leader
Kirill Mazurov, who had been Zimyanin's deputy and successor in the Byelorussian Komsomol in the 1940s, was transferred to Moscow and raised to full membership of the Politburo. His full membership of the Central Committee was restored in April 1966. He took a harder line than his predecessor, who had warned against 'anti-intellectualism'. Speaking at a private meeting of Soviet journalists in September 1967, Zimyanin described the exiled Ukrainian writer
Valery Tarsis as a madman, and
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn as "abnormal, a schizophrenic" with "a grudge against the regime", and attacked the poets
Yevgeny Yevtushenko and
Andrei Voznesensky. In March 1976, he was appointed a Secretary of the Central Committee, with responsibility for culture, science, and the mass media. He retired in March 1987. ==Notes==