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Vilho Helanen (1899-1952)

 

Mystery writer, playwright, Ph.D., whose novels were pioneering works of Finnish detective fiction. Helanen's series character was the lawyer Kaarlo Rauta, who made his appearance in HELSINGISSÄ TAPAHTUU (1941) and then in several other novels. Among Helanen's best mystery stories are FILMITALON MURHENÄYTELMÄ (1948), RISTILUKIN ARVOITUS (1949) and 'KANSANTUHOOJA' (1951). Between the World Wars Helanen was active in right-wing organizations gaining much renown as an ardent orator. He also advocated closer ties among kindred
people in the Baltic countries and Finland; especially well-known figure he was in Estonia.

"Olen ollut melko taitava hankkimaan vihamiehiä, ystäviä on keräämättä kertynyt riittävän paljon. Vilho Helanen oli yksi niitä, joihin välit katkesivat AKS:n vaiheissa, kun hän valitsi IKL:n, ja hänhänm pysähtyi elämään noita aikoja ja kirjoitti niistä aikanaan romaanin. Siinä taidan minäkin esiintyä." (President Urho Kekkonen in Vuosisatani, 1981)

Vilho Helanen was born in Oulu as the son of District Judge Klaus Robert Helanen and Johanna Aurora Gummerus. While still at school he started to write, and he also edited the school magazine. He also read voluptuously and had his first encounter with the works of Nietzsche and Strindberg. Helanen's classmates in Helsinki at Helsingin Suomalainen Lyseo included the future writer Uuno Mattila (pseydonym Yrjö Kivimies). He studied at the University of Helsinki history and economics, receiving his M.A. in 1922 and Ph.D. in 1940. In 1919 Helanen participated as volunteer in the Estonian freedom fight. He joined the right-wing organization AKS (Academic Karelian Society) in 1923 and in the same year he made his bebut as a novelist with SARASTUS. The book, which took its name from a temperance society ("dawn"), did not gain commercial success. Sarastus depicted the life of young student and their visions about the future of their country. "Silti minä olen vielä nytkin iloinen siitä, että tulin nuorena kirjoittaneeksi tuon kuolupoikaromaanin. Olen tietoinen sen suurista puutteista. Mutta sittenkin siihen on melko tuoreeltaan vangittu kappale Suomen syvimmän murroskauden nuoruutta." (Helanen in Meistä tuli kirjailijoita, 1947). One of the characters, a school girl, was modelled after his wife, Kaarina Emilia Hurskainen, whom he married in 1922. Helanen had met her already at the age of 16. Vilho and Kaarina Emilia Helanen had four children, one of whom was adopted - she was born in Ingria, and later moved to Sweden. Their son Juhani disappeared in 1946 while sailing across the Gulf of Bothnia. According to some assumptions he was helping Estonian refugees to escape to Sweden.

As a writer Helanen started his career at the age of 17 when his short story 'Ilmoitus' appeared in a newspaper. His first book, a non-fiction study of the contribution of Finland on the Estonian independence process, SUOMALAISET VIRON VAPAUSSODASSA, was published in 1921. Helanen had participated in Estonia's struggle for independence in 1919. From 1922 to 1941 Helanen worked as a secretary of the board of directors at an insurance company. He was an influential student organization leader, the chief editor of the student magazine Ylioppilaslehti (1926-28), and wrote for the magazine Suomen Heimo (1938-1944) until it was closed. From 1934 to 1944 he was a member of the board of the National Theater. He was also the chairman of the right-wing Academic Karelian Society from the 1920s.

In the 1930s Helanen participated in the Lapua movement, which campaigned to root out all vestiges of Marxism, and he was an active member of the nationalistic party IKL (People's Patriotic Movement). For his work in creating contacts between Finland and Estonia Helanen was awarded in 1931 a diploma and an Estonian badge of honour. In 1934 he was arrested in Tallinn due a diplomatic conflict and declared person non-grata. Behind the decision was Helanen's connections to the ultra-nationalist organization Eesti Vabadussõjalaste Liit and its leader Arthur Sirk (1900-1937). Sirk died in Luxembourg under dubious circumstances.

Helanen called the Continuation War between Finland and the Soviet Union (1941-44) a "holy war". "Nyt luodaan eheän, yksimielisen, elämäntahoisen kansamme voimalla Suomi, jonka yltä idän uhka in iäksi poissa," he wrote in Suomen Heimo in June 30, 1941. (Now, with our united, unanimous people with a strong desire to live, we create a new Finland, and dispel the threat of the East forever.) Helanen's opposition to the Communist ideology was also seen in his novels, most clearly in Helsingissä tapahtuu (1941). Helanen served in the army as an information officer (1941-43) and then as a director of immigrant committee, helping among others Ingrian refugees in Tallinn and keeping contact with the Germans, who saw him as "ein fanatischer Chauvinist". In 1944 he helped a number of Estonians to escape over the Finnish gulf in front of the advancing Red Army.

After the war all allegedly pro-fascist parties and organizations were outlawed, including IKL and the Academic Karelia Society. Helanen believed that Finland will be occupied by the Soviet troops and grew mustache to make his identification more difficult. However, he did not leave the country as some of his friends. In 1945 he wrote two mystery novels, VALVOVA SILMÄ, which was published in 1946 and RAUHATON RANNIKKO, which appeared a year later. His play BERENIKE, written under the pseudonym Jussi Sara, won the second prize in a drama competition. Helanen became a dramaturgist at the film company Suomi-Filmi and also wrote colums for the magazine Kauppalehti under the pseudonym "Tero" - its was the name of the family's Irish setter. Tero's enemies were Communists and educated people who have turned their coat and started to support the left. In the new political situation, where the extreme right-wing organizations were forbidden, Helanen was accused of treason in 1948 and imprisoned. He had helped in 1944 an Danish engineer Thoralf Kyrre who worked for the German intelligence. Helanen was sentenced for six year imprisonment but pardoned in 1951 by President J.K. Paasikivi. The friendship society Suomi Neuvostoliitto Seura (Finland Soviet Union Society) had promised to grant Helanen political immunity if he joined the society but he refused the offer

"- Rakas lapsi, minun puolestani saat sanoa Metsikön leikkiä miksi tahansa. Tavallaan se kuitenkin kuvasti sitä erilaisten mahdollisuuksien ja mahdottomuuksien viidakkoa, jonka keskelle minut on tämän murhan tutkijana nyt tipautettu. Olen vakuuttunut siitä, että saan tarpoa monia vääriä polkuja, ennen kuin löydän oikean. Minun on pakko puhkoa se sekä poliittisen pelin että henkilökohtaisten suhteiden hämäryys, joka ympäröi ministeri Saarkiven elämää ja jonka jostain nurkasta on löydettävissä vastaus siihen, miksi nuo kolme laukausta ammuttiin." (from Kolme laukausta yössä)

In 1950 appeared Helanen's detective novel KOLME LAUKAUSTA YÖSSÄ which was set in the years of the Continuation War. Captain Kaarlo Rauta is assigned to solve the murder case of a high government official, who has eagerly supported warm relationships between Finland and Nazi Germany, allied at that time. The atmosphere is in the capital town, far from the front lines, is drawn with few skillfully observations: Alvar Aalto's Olympic Stadion in Helsinki is seen as a monument of the canceled Olympic Games of 1940. A shelter is built in the middle of Esplanade road. Rauta's wife plays piano and voluntarily helps at a hospital. During his investigation Rauta meets politicians, spies, beautiful dark women, and spends much time in restaurants in Stockholm and Helsinki before finding out that that behind the murder was a jealous husband.

In KOHTALON SILTA (1952) Rauta realizes that the world has changed much since the war. "Eikä ollut helppo päästä selville siitä, mitä itse kukin oli tappioon päättyneen sodan seurauksena olleesta romahduksesta pystynyt ja halunnut itselleen pelastaa." Helanen's promising career as a dramaturgist and detective story writer was cut by a heart attack in Frankfurt on June 8, 1952. His plans to meet the Swedish mystery writer Maria Lang and publish his book in Sweden lapsed. Helanen's next novel, RAUTA ROOMASSA JA PARIISISSA, was left on a draft stage.

For further reading: Meistä tuli kirjalijoita, ed. by K. Sorjonen and V. Rekola (1947); Hornanlinnan perilliset by Timo Kukkola (1980); Etelän tien kulkija - Vilho Helanen, ed. by Heikki Roiko-Jokela ja Heikki Seppänen (1997) - Other popular Finnish mystery writers: Marton Taiga, Outsider, Mauri Sariola

Selected works:

  • SUOMALAISET VIRON VAPAUSSODASSA, 1921
  • SARASTUS, 1923
  • ANKARAT TÄHDET, 1926 - Karmid täded, trans. into Estonian by Hella Jurgenstein
  • HERÄÄVÄ HEIMO, 1926
  • SALAMAN KIRJA SUOMEN LAPSILLE, 1927
  • SIUNATTUA TYÖTÄ, 1927
  • MIES JOKA USKALSI, 1928
  • KIUSAUS, 1930
  • KARJALAN JA INKERIN HÄTÄ, 1931 (ed. with Reino Castrén)
  • "ISÄ, JOS SINÄ KUOLISIT MILLÄ ELÄISIMME SITTEN?", 1932
  • LUOTA MINUUN: TARINA KEVÄÄSTÄ JA TAKATALVESTA, 1932
  • PIENI TÄHTITYTTÖ, 1932
  • VELI VILHO HELASEN [AKS:n] YLEISESSÄ KOKOUKSESSA 27.4.32 KÄYTTÄMÄ PUHEENVUORO, 1932
  • POHJOIS-POHJALAINEN OSAKUNTA 1907-32 (ed. by Vilho Helanen et al.)
  • HARKITKAA!, 1936
  • POHJALAINEN OSAKUNTA vv. 1828-1852, 1937 (doctoral thesis)
  • SUURI MURROS, 1937
  • HELSINGISSÄ TAPAHTUU, 1941 (as Heikki Aksila)
  • PORTHANIN-JUHLAT VV. 1839-1866, 1941
  • PALAVA PENSAS. ELIAS SIMOJOEN PUHEITA, 1942 (ed.)
  • ANNI, 1943
  • VALVOVA SILMÄ, 1946
  • YLIOPPILAS LEHTORINNAAMION TAKANA, 1946
  • BERENIKE, 1947
  • RAUHATON RANNIKKO, 1947
  • FILMITALON MURHENÄYTELMÄ, 1948
  • VENE TULEE VALKAMAAN, 1948
  • RISTILUKIN ARVOITUS, 1949
  • KOLME LAUKAUSTA YÖSSÄ, 1950
  • "KANSANTUHOOJA", 1951
  • OULU, KOSKIEN KAUPUNKI, 1951 (ed. with Uuno Laukka)
  • KOHTALON SILTA, 1952


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