Friday, 23 June 2023

ams - commemoration - The People's Poet - Anna Akhmatova



Anna Akhmatova begins Rekviem with these lines: “No, not under a foreign sky/ Nor in the shelter of a foreign wing,/ With my people, there stood I / With them, in their suffering.” Akhmatova spent 17 months waiting in long queues outside a jail in Leningrad to find out what had happened to her son, picked up during a purge. The lines above are based on that experience. Her son’s arrest may have led Akhmatova to write Rekviem, but by doing so she was also giving voice to countless mothers whose irreparable losses must be remembered forever. It is said that Akhmatova composed Rekviem, in her mind. The ideas are based on the thousands of people rounded up and sent to the Gulag, it survived only in the memory of a few close friends she narrated it to. It was first published in 1963 by the Society of Russian Émigré Writers. It never saw the light of day in the Soviet Union till it's dissolution. Anna Akhmatova is one of the best known and most loved Russian poets. In addition to poetry, she wrote prose including memoirs, autobiographical pieces, and literary scholarship on Russian writers such as Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin. She also translated Italian, French, Armenian, and Korean poetry.

 

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