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Obituaries

Obituary: Yevgeny Yevtushenko

He was the Soviet Union’s own “angry young man”, an electrifying performer whose work dealt not with productivity but personal, intimate subjects.

April 26, 2017 17:37
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By

Julie Carbonara,

julie carbonara

2 min read

There are no monuments over Babi Yar.

But the sheer cliff is like a rough tombstone./I am afraid. /Today, I am as old as all the Jewish people./It seems to me now, that I, too, am a Jew.

When Yevgeny Yevtushenko, who has died aged 84, wrote Babi Yar in 1961, the ravine near Kiev where more than 33,000 Jews had been massacred by the Nazis 20 years earlier stood unmarked.

Soviet authorities never denied that a massacre had taken place but they refused to acknowledge the victims’ Jewish identity, opting instead to refer to them as “Soviet citizens”.