in 1928
Before World War I The first secret groups were organized in 1912 around the
Pavasaris magazine. In May 1911, a group of 29 teachers of the
Saulė Society gathered at the residence of in Kaunas and decided to establish a Union of Lithuanian Catholic Teachers. A year later this organization began publishing
Pavasaris – the first Lithuanian-language periodical dedicated to Lithuanian youth. Various periodicals had supplements for the youth (
Jaunimas by
Lietuvos ūkininkas,
Ateitis by
Draugija,
Aušrinė by
Lietuvos žinios,
Šaltinėlis by
Šaltinis), but there was no separate periodical.
Pavasaris was a monthly illustrated magazine, first published in May 1912 at the printing press of
Saliamonas Banaitis. It devoted most of its attention to issues of morality, religion, self-education, and urged its readers to protect the Catholic values, treasure the
Lithuanian language, develop
Lithuanian national consciousness, and join Lithuanian societies and organizations. It also published articles on popular science (e.g. explaining
solar eclipses),
history of Lithuania, brief mentions of world events, jokes and riddles. It ceased publication in July 1914 due to
World War I, but was reestablished in 1918 and continued to be published by pavasarininkai until 1940. Pavasaris groups were promoted by priests
Jonas Totoraitis and , and organized by local clergy, teachers, members of other Lithuanian societies (such as
Žiburys or the Lithuanian Catholic Teetotalism Society). By 1914, Pavasaris had groups in
Marijampolė, ,
Radviliškis,
Sejny,
Surviliškis,
Šeduva,
Šiauliai,
Vabalninkas,
Valkininkai,
Varėna. In 1914, Pavasaris members organized the first conference at the home of
Maironis in Kaunas in 1914. At the time, it was an illegal gathering attended by 17 people, including
Pranas Dovydaitis. They adopted the statute of Pavasaris organization, but further developments were interrupted by
World War I. The society became inactive.
Post-war The first Pavasaris groups were reestablished in 1916 in
Vilnius. The organization recovered and expanded after
Lithuania declared independence in February 1918. It became an official organization and organized its first legal conference in Kaunas in September 1919, attended by 120 people. It adopted the official name of the Lithuanian Catholic Youth Union Pavasaris (). Other annual conferences were organized in 1920–1925, 1927–1928, and 1938. The conferences were accompanied by various other events. For example, in 1924, Pavasaris held a song festival attended by 20 choirs and 970 singers. In 1925, pavasarininkai's chairman
Juozas Eretas travelled to the 28th International
Eucharistic Congress in Chicago and established contacts with the
Knights of Lithuania. The anniversary conference in July 1927 (15 years since establishment) was particularly large; it was opened by President
Antanas Smetona and was attended by guests from the Knights of Lithuania. It was accompanied by a sports competition (220 athletes who beat two Lithuanian records), an exhibition of folk art (2,000 exhibits), and a parade from the
Town Hall to
St. Michael the Archangel Church that featured
floats (a novelty in Lithuania). In total, it was attended by about 11,000 people; 2,500 of them were members of choirs. However, the relationship between Pavasarininkai and the authoritarian regime of President Smetona was not friendly. The regime saw the
Lithuanian Christian Democratic Party and various Catholic organizations as its opponents and limited their activities. For example, it issued a secret order not to admit pavasarininkai to
Kaunas War School and would not issue permits for their national conferences. Rumors had it that Pavasaris' chairman
Juozas Eretas who was from Switzerland, resigned in 1928 to prevent complaints that pavasarininkai were led by a non-Lithuanian and not due to poor health as officially claimed. In 1932, the government did not grant a permit for the congress to mark the 20th anniversary of Pavasaris. Instead, groups organized regional gatherings and conferences. The one in
Marijampolė featured speeches by
Pranas Dovydaitis,
Juozas Eretas, and Juozas Leimonas, in which they protested against various government restrictions. All three received three-month prison sentences for "inciting locals against the government." In 1928, Pavasarininkai received a letter from
Pope Pius XI encouraging their activities. In 1933, it was reorganized into a federation that united separate societies of men, women, and youth (ages 13–16). Local groups were also split by gender. The youth union was dropped in 1937. A separate organization, Vyčiai (Knights) for urban Catholic youth was merged into Pavasaris in 1935. The 25th-anniversary conference in June 1938 (delayed a year due to issues obtaining permits) was attended by as many as 45,000 people, including about 7,000 sports competitors and 6,000 singers in 247 choirs. The organization was abolished after the
Soviet occupation in June 1940. The Soviets persecuted the organization: its chairman Juozas Leimonas was arrested already in July 1940. Three members were killed in the
Rainiai massacre and two in the
Chervyen massacre. Pavasarininkai also joined the anti-Soviet
June Uprising. As a result, many items related to Pavasarininkai were destroyed by the Soviet regime. For example, ten flags of local pavasarininkai groups at the Samogitian Museum "Alka" were slated for destruction, but were secretly preserved by museum employees. ==Activities==