Raisa Gorbachev was the wife of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
@First Lady of U.s.s.r, Career and Personal Life
Raisa Gorbachev was the wife of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
Raisa Gorbacheva born at
Raisa married Mikhail Gorbachev on 25 September 1953. At that time, both of them were students at the Moscow State University. The couple celebrated their wedding on 7 November 1953, in the university hostel at Stromynka Street; almost six weeks after their actual event.
Raisa gave birth to her only daughter Irina Mikhailovna in 1958. Raisa also had two granddaughters named Ksenia and Anastasia and one great granddaughter named Aleksandra.
Raisa was diagnosed with leukemia in July 1999. She was immediately taken to Münster in Germany and was admitted at the Münster University Hospital for her treatment. There she was put under the care of Professor Thomas Buechner, a leading hematologist. She received treatment for around two months, but all efforts failed. Raisa Gorbachev died on 20 September 1999, at the age of 67, in Münster.
Raisa Maximovna Gorbachev was born on 5 January 1932 in the city of Rubtsovsk in the Altai region (Alta Krai) of Siberia, to Maxim Andreyevich Titarenko and Alexandra Petrovna Parada. Her father was a railway construction engineer.
The Titarenkos had three children. Raisa was the eldest of the three siblings and was very close to sister Ludmila. Although their family moved about a lot, the siblings had a normal upbringing. Raisa spent most of her childhood in the Ural Mountains. During this period, she had to change many schools. However, she was always a good student.
In 1949, passed her secondary school with a gold medal in Sterlitamak, Barshkiria. It enabled her to enroll at any institute of higher learning without appearing for entrance examinations. Raisa chose Moscow State University and enrolled at the Department of Philosophy, where she studied Marxist-Leninist Philosophy. She graduated from Moscow State University in 1954.
In 1955, Raisa Gorbachev started her career as a lecturer at the Philosophy Department of Stavropol Medical Institute and also at Stavropol Agricultural Institute. She mainly taught Marxist-Leninist Philosophy. By this time she was married to Mikhail Gorbachev, who became the First Party Secretary of the Stavropol Regional Committee.
Along with her teaching assignment, Raisa also started sociological research. Her thesis was based on conditions of the peasants as well as of the collective farming. She sent questioners to thousands of farmers and then followed it up with live interviews. To do this she had to travel extensively and thus she could gather a realistic picture about the condition of the people. Mikhail Gorbachev used the data she so painstakingly collected to solve some local problems. This caught the attention of the central leadership.
Raisa completed her Candidates Degree from the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute in 1967. It was equivalent to a Ph.D.
In 1978, the Gorbachevs were brought back to Moscow. While Mikhail worked in the Central Committee as Secretary for Agriculture, Raisa joined her alma mater. She taught Marxist-Leninist philosophy at the Moscow State University.
She left the post in April 1985, when Mikhail Gorbachev became General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. From now on she dedicated herself solely to the good of the people, patronizing many public as well as private charities.
Raisa Gorbachev broke all traditions as she carved out a public profile of her own. By appearing by her husband’s side on all foreign as well as domestic tours, she not only improved the country’s image in the eyes of the outside world, but also dispelled many of the misgivings that the world had about Russia.