Posted on Mar 5, 2022
Why This State of the Union I'm Reading 'Babi Yar'
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The most famous of his poems was “Babi Yar”—a condemnation of the ongoing massacre of Jews and others by the Nazi Einsatzgruppen (1941–1943) in a ravine with that name at the northern edge of Kyiv. Soviet accounts after the war speak of 100,000 dead. Others say 34,000 initially. Still, others think there were Nazis, Ukrainians, and Russians involved in the myriad slayings of Jews that dwarf anything happening now. Whatever the case, the site, and its present Holocaust memorial, is near the Kyiv TV tower that was just hit by a Russian airstrike, killing five and damaging the Holocaust memorial complex.
Yevgeni Yevtushenko’s poem, written to expose the inhumanity of Babi Yar, and the subsequent injustice of the government’s refusal to raise a monument to the thousands of Jews executed there by the Nazi troops, produced a tremendous effect in Russia. Overt antisemitism slowly decreased, and many Russians to whom this had been normal and accepted practice, woke up to a new realization.”
Few works of literature have more impact on us during war than “Babi Yar.”
Maybe someone should read it to Putin, although it’s doubtful he would listen. Among his many recent remarks, he called the Ukrainians, whose president Volodymyr Zelensky is Jewish, neo-Nazis. I (partially) excuse the reference to “The Internationale” in the name of great poetry.
Yevgeni Yevtushenko’s poem, written to expose the inhumanity of Babi Yar, and the subsequent injustice of the government’s refusal to raise a monument to the thousands of Jews executed there by the Nazi troops, produced a tremendous effect in Russia. Overt antisemitism slowly decreased, and many Russians to whom this had been normal and accepted practice, woke up to a new realization.”
Few works of literature have more impact on us during war than “Babi Yar.”
Maybe someone should read it to Putin, although it’s doubtful he would listen. Among his many recent remarks, he called the Ukrainians, whose president Volodymyr Zelensky is Jewish, neo-Nazis. I (partially) excuse the reference to “The Internationale” in the name of great poetry.
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Thank you my friend MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. for posting the perspective from theepochtimes.com author Roger I Simon.
I did not watch nor listen POTUS Biden's first sate of the union and I proably will not watch or listen to any more if he survives and is coherent :-)
Tommy’s Garage, Like Biden’s State Of The Union, But Funnier
https://rumble.com/vwh03l-tommys-garage-like-bidens-state-of-the-union-but-funnier.html
"I was going to write about President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, but it was too tedious to inspire a response and devoid of even one semi-interesting idea. What could I write?
Even the references to the Ukraine war were more confused than enlightening, such as the mind-boggling gaffe, “Putin may circle Kyiv with tanks, but he’ll never gain the hearts and souls of the Iranian people.”
Our president’s destruction of the American energy independence gained by his predecessor that many think opened the door for the current war was, of course, not mentioned. Not a word was uttered either about turning on the American oil spigot again or about cutting our dependence on Russian oil in the middle of Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression.
But something caught my eye today in the fog of war that touched my heart profoundly, so I will leave to others the deconstruction of Biden’s speech.
It took me back to the late eighties; I was on a cultural exchange of sorts in the Soviet Union, traveling from Leningrad all the way to Yalta in the Crimea, then in Russian hands.
In Moscow, a group of Russian writers—some of whom later asked me to help them get out; something I had no way of doing—took me to lunch at the headquarters of the Union of Soviet Writers.
It was a grandiose, high-ceilinged place replete with crystal chandeliers and elegant china. They treated their authors well—those who went along with the party line, anyway. I was reminded of Philip Roth’s famous description of the difference between writers in the east and west: “There, nothing goes and everything matters; here everything goes and nothing matters.”
Sitting at a neighboring table at that lunch was an extraordinarily handsome man in that Russian manner with that shock of blond hair resembling the tennis star Yevgeny Kafelnikov some years later. But I knew immediately who it was, because he had been on the cover of our Time Magazine and was one of the most famous writers in the world, and certainly the most famous Russian writer at that time—Yevgeny Yevtushenko.
Although disappointed to see him there—I didn’t like to think of him as a party man, but it’s hard to judge how any of us would be in a society like that—somewhat star-struck as I only am by genuinely great artists and scientists, I got up and introduced myself. He was quite cordial.
Why am I thinking of my chance-meeting with Yevtushenko today (he died in 2017 at the age of 84 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, of all places)? The man was many things—novelist, essayist, dramatist, screenwriter, publisher, actor, editor, and director of several films, but to the West, he was most known for his poetry.
The most famous of his poems was “Babi Yar”—a condemnation of the ongoing massacre of Jews and others by the Nazi Einsatzgruppen (1941–1943) in a ravine with that name at the northern edge of Kyiv. Soviet accounts after the war speak of 100,000 dead. Others say 34,000 initially. Still, others think there were Nazis, Ukrainians, and Russians involved in the myriad slayings of Jews that dwarf anything happening now.
Whatever the case, the site, and its present Holocaust memorial, is near the Kyiv TV tower that was just hit by a Russian airstrike, killing five and damaging the Holocaust memorial complex.
The Israeli government is, needless to say, upset, although in a difficult position, fearful of alienating the Russians with whom they have complicated dealings.
Perhaps they need another reading of Yevtushenko’s poem, one of the most powerful criticisms of antisemitism ever written and composed by a man who was not Jewish.
FYI SFC Boots AttawaySGM David W. Carr LOM, DMSM MP SGT SSG Donald H "Don" Bates Sgt Albert Castro LTC (Join to see) Sgt Kelli Mays SPC Michael Oles SR1SG Dan CapriTSgt David L.CWO4 Terrence Clark SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.DLTC John Shaw MGySgt (Join to see) PO3 Phyllis Maynard LTC (Join to see) SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SGM Bill Frazer SSG Bill McCoy
I did not watch nor listen POTUS Biden's first sate of the union and I proably will not watch or listen to any more if he survives and is coherent :-)
Tommy’s Garage, Like Biden’s State Of The Union, But Funnier
https://rumble.com/vwh03l-tommys-garage-like-bidens-state-of-the-union-but-funnier.html
"I was going to write about President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, but it was too tedious to inspire a response and devoid of even one semi-interesting idea. What could I write?
Even the references to the Ukraine war were more confused than enlightening, such as the mind-boggling gaffe, “Putin may circle Kyiv with tanks, but he’ll never gain the hearts and souls of the Iranian people.”
Our president’s destruction of the American energy independence gained by his predecessor that many think opened the door for the current war was, of course, not mentioned. Not a word was uttered either about turning on the American oil spigot again or about cutting our dependence on Russian oil in the middle of Vladimir Putin’s war of aggression.
But something caught my eye today in the fog of war that touched my heart profoundly, so I will leave to others the deconstruction of Biden’s speech.
It took me back to the late eighties; I was on a cultural exchange of sorts in the Soviet Union, traveling from Leningrad all the way to Yalta in the Crimea, then in Russian hands.
In Moscow, a group of Russian writers—some of whom later asked me to help them get out; something I had no way of doing—took me to lunch at the headquarters of the Union of Soviet Writers.
It was a grandiose, high-ceilinged place replete with crystal chandeliers and elegant china. They treated their authors well—those who went along with the party line, anyway. I was reminded of Philip Roth’s famous description of the difference between writers in the east and west: “There, nothing goes and everything matters; here everything goes and nothing matters.”
Sitting at a neighboring table at that lunch was an extraordinarily handsome man in that Russian manner with that shock of blond hair resembling the tennis star Yevgeny Kafelnikov some years later. But I knew immediately who it was, because he had been on the cover of our Time Magazine and was one of the most famous writers in the world, and certainly the most famous Russian writer at that time—Yevgeny Yevtushenko.
Although disappointed to see him there—I didn’t like to think of him as a party man, but it’s hard to judge how any of us would be in a society like that—somewhat star-struck as I only am by genuinely great artists and scientists, I got up and introduced myself. He was quite cordial.
Why am I thinking of my chance-meeting with Yevtushenko today (he died in 2017 at the age of 84 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, of all places)? The man was many things—novelist, essayist, dramatist, screenwriter, publisher, actor, editor, and director of several films, but to the West, he was most known for his poetry.
The most famous of his poems was “Babi Yar”—a condemnation of the ongoing massacre of Jews and others by the Nazi Einsatzgruppen (1941–1943) in a ravine with that name at the northern edge of Kyiv. Soviet accounts after the war speak of 100,000 dead. Others say 34,000 initially. Still, others think there were Nazis, Ukrainians, and Russians involved in the myriad slayings of Jews that dwarf anything happening now.
Whatever the case, the site, and its present Holocaust memorial, is near the Kyiv TV tower that was just hit by a Russian airstrike, killing five and damaging the Holocaust memorial complex.
The Israeli government is, needless to say, upset, although in a difficult position, fearful of alienating the Russians with whom they have complicated dealings.
Perhaps they need another reading of Yevtushenko’s poem, one of the most powerful criticisms of antisemitism ever written and composed by a man who was not Jewish.
FYI SFC Boots AttawaySGM David W. Carr LOM, DMSM MP SGT SSG Donald H "Don" Bates Sgt Albert Castro LTC (Join to see) Sgt Kelli Mays SPC Michael Oles SR1SG Dan CapriTSgt David L.CWO4 Terrence Clark SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.DLTC John Shaw MGySgt (Join to see) PO3 Phyllis Maynard LTC (Join to see) SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SGM Bill Frazer SSG Bill McCoy
Tommy’s Garage, Like Biden’s State Of The Union, But Funnier
Tommy’s Garage, Like Biden’s State Of The Union, But Funnier Tell Big Tech To Shove It -www.bizpacreview.com Support BPR On Rumble - Are You Subscribed To BPR’s Channels? Culture War On BPR - http
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LTC Stephen F.
The Worst, Best & Strangest Clips from Biden's State of the Union | Direct Message | Rubin Report
https://rumble.com/vw7g01-the-worst-best-and-strangest-clips-from-bidens-state-of-the-union-direct-me.html
Sgt Kelli Mays MSG Andrew White MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. PO1 Sam Deel PO3 Edward Riddle PO3 (Join to see) PO3 Steven Sherrill SFC (Join to see)CMSgt Marcus FalleafPO1 Jeff ChandlerSPC Steven DepuyPO3 Myles PostPVT Mark WhitcombSSG (Join to see)SPC Carlton PhelpsCOL Thomas McGrathCSM Bob StanekCWO4 Terrence ClarkCPL Ronald Keyes Jr CPL Dave Hoover
https://rumble.com/vw7g01-the-worst-best-and-strangest-clips-from-bidens-state-of-the-union-direct-me.html
Sgt Kelli Mays MSG Andrew White MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. PO1 Sam Deel PO3 Edward Riddle PO3 (Join to see) PO3 Steven Sherrill SFC (Join to see)CMSgt Marcus FalleafPO1 Jeff ChandlerSPC Steven DepuyPO3 Myles PostPVT Mark WhitcombSSG (Join to see)SPC Carlton PhelpsCOL Thomas McGrathCSM Bob StanekCWO4 Terrence ClarkCPL Ronald Keyes Jr CPL Dave Hoover
The Worst, Best & Strangest Clips from Biden's State of the Union | Direct Message | Rubin...
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” responds to Joe Biden’s first State of the Union address. Dave shares clips of his favorite moments of the SOTU. Many margaritas will be consumed, guaranteeing this to
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PO3 Edward Riddle
Thank You Brother Steve for the informational video. I, too, didn't watch the comedy hour either so at least I got the high points.
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