Yakov Drobnis
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Yakov Naumovich Drobnis (Russian: Яков Наумович Дробнис; 6 March 1890 – 1 February 1937) was a Bolshevik revolutionary who supported Leon Trotsky. He was a defendant at one of the Moscow Show Trials.
Drobnis was born in Hlukhiv, in Chernihiv province, in the Jewish Pale of Settlement in Ukraine.[1] Born to a large Jewish family of shoemakers, he became an apprentice shoemaker after leaving primary school, but ran away to Astrakhan at the age of 13. As a Jew, he was not allowed to remain and was deported back to Hlukhiv, where he met a shoemaker who had been deported from Baku for political activity that introduced him to other revolutionaries. He joined the Hlukhiv branch of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) in 1906. He was arrested and held in prison for six weeks for taking part in a strike. He was arrested again in January 1908 and charged with membership in the RSDLP. This time, he was held for ten months awaiting trial, then sentenced to five years in prison. On his release, he moved to Vilnius, where he was arrested, for the third time in January 1915 and deported to Poltava, where he joined the local Bolshevik organisation.