“Babi Yar ” In the poem, Babi Yar, Yevgeny Yevtushenko does a wonderful job of paying tribute to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust. He does this by portraying the history of the Jewish people. Yevtushenko also uses various literary devices to heighten the sentiment of the poem. The poem is told in the first person, by the author of the poem. In the poem it is also apparent that he is addressing all Russian citizens when he writes “O Russian people.” In this manner Yevtushenko is able to eulogize the Jewish victims of the Holocaust in front of a wide audience.
This technique also allows him to speak directly to the Russian people and tell them of their wrongs at the end of the poem. Through usage of the first person he is able to place himself in the various situations of anti-Semitism in history. He takes us from Egypt, to the cross; from the Dryfus affair to the pogroms; from Anne Frank’s dark room to the massacre of Babi Yar. Through all this Yevtushenko proclaims that “I” was there. This gives the reader a sense of being trapped in the middle of these horrifying events. The first person gives an eerie description that a third person description could not give.
After he finishes his recitation of past events he begins addressing the Russian people of the present. He tells them that in general the Russians are a good hearted people. But, he goes on to say that there are a minority of Russians who ruin the good name of the whole. Yevtushenko contends that these people call themselves “The union of the Russian people.” However, he then goes on to directly contradict their self-proclaimed name with clever uses of diction. He claims that the Internationale, or the Russian “union” song, will only be sung after these same anti-Semites are dead.
The Research paper on Mbo In Russia Organization Russian People
Introduction A successful implementation of MBO in any country requires a narrow examination of such elements as customs and traditions of that country, which give support to the application of MBO. History These elements are highly influenced by the history. Starting from the early centuries, Russian people got accustomed to live under the central rule when the tsar was the only decision-making ...
In the last lines of the poem he admits that although he is not a Jew he demands to “let me be a Jew.” Only when he is a Jew can he then go on to “call myself a Russian” What he means by all this is that the Russian people are not a group of Jew-haters, but rather a country of people who feel for the sorrows of the Jewish people. The first stanza is an introduction that tells us the occasion of the poem. It claims that “There are no monuments on Babi Yar, A steep ravine is all, a rough memorial.” He then goes on to devote the rest of the poem as a eulogy to the Jews killed by the Russians. Therefore, this first stanza gives us the reason why he wrote the poem. This poem would in fact be the memorial for Babi Yar. The first stanza also does a terrific job of setting the gloomy tone for the rest of the poem.
He also seems to hint at the fact that the anti-Semitism that began with the Christians is the same exact anti-Semitism that has continued to the present date. The anti-Semitism of Egypt remained in “her ancient days”, but he insists that “I perish on the cross, and even now I bear the red marks of nails.” His usage of the words “even now” contend that that specific anti-Semitism continues to the present date. In the next few stanzas sound plays a critical role. In the first line of the second stanza there is a repetition of the letter “d” in “Dryfus, detested, denounced.” This sound conjures something approaching from behind you, like a march. Although, this stanza only affects one man, Dryfus, but there is the image of something approaching in the “d” sound. The second line of the third stanza reads “I seam to see blood spurt and spread.” Here we have the repetition of the “s” sound.
This sounds like air escaping from something, getting ready to explode. Then all of a sudden there are “The rampant pogrom roars.” Things are getting worse. In the following stanza is a “translucent twig.” The repeated “t” sound is like the ticking of a time bomb. Immediately after this one reads of the “pounding”, or the final explosion.
The Essay on High Holy Days Jews From Anti
Analyzing Faith and Doubt in "High Holy Days" by Jane Shore The main idea that Jane Shore is making in "High Holy Days" is that the child or young teenager is a "Chosen One," (line 54) and she must free the Jews from Anti-Semitism and the Nazis just as Moses saved the Israelites from the Egyptians. She had no idea she was going to be the chosen one just as Moses did not. Moses was lost too just ...
The explosion creates a “silent” sound and an “endless soundless” because “thousands and thousands of thousands are dead.” There is hardly anyone left to attack. Almost all the Jews are dead.