- Ilya Ehrenburg
Ilya Grigoryevich Ehrenburg ( _ru. Илья́ Григо́рьевич Эренбу́рг, IPA-ru|ɪˈlʲja grʲɪˈgorʲɪvɪtɕ ɪrʲɪnˈburk), OldStyleDate|January 27|1891|January 15 (
Kiev ,Russian Empire ) –August 31 ,1967 (Moscow ,Soviet Union ) was a Sovietpropagandist ,writer andjournalist whose 1954 novel "The Thaw" gave its name to theKhrushchev Thaw .Life and work
Ehrenburg was a revolutionary as a teenager, a disenchanted
poet in his youth, writing Catholic poems despite hisJewish background, a follower ofLenin on arrival inParis , who then became an anti-Bolshevik and sensitive journalist.Later he returned to Russia where he was hired to write
Soviet propaganda , while occasionally defending his views with boldness againstStalin or government mouthpieces. He a was prominent member of theJewish Anti-Fascist Committee .Ehrenburg is well known for his writing, especially his memoirs, which contain many portraits of interest to literary historians and biographers. Together with
Vasily Grossman , Ehrenburg edited The "Black Book" that contains documentary accounts by Jewish survivors ofthe Holocaust in the Soviet Union and Poland.He died in 1967 of prostate and bladder cancer, and was interred in
Novodevichy Cemetery inMoscow , where his gravestone is adorned with a reproduction of his portrait drawn by his friendPablo Picasso .Literary References
Alan Furst - considered by many America's premier writer of espionage fiction - found much of Ehrenburg's life and work so riveting that he modeled the central character in his 1991 novel "Dark Star" ISBN 0375759999 on the Russian writer. Addressing the degree to which fact and fiction sometimes overlap, Furst said, "(a particular character) was modeled on a number of people, although I've written about many people who did exist. Andre Szara in "Dark Star", for example, is based on the Russian writer Ilya Ehrenburg" ("Boston Globe " interview,June 4 ,2006 ). Six weeks later, in another interview, his comments were rather more qualified: "None of my characters are meant to be representations of real people. But in fact, in "Dark Star" the lead character is a Russified Polish Jew, a foreign correspondent for "Pravda ". So are we talking about Ilya Ehrenburg? Not really. But he's like that." Finally, we're left to decide if that's a yes or a no.Vladimir Nabokov wrote of him: "As a writer he doesn't exist, Ehrenburg. He is a journalist. He was always corrupt". [cite book |author=Field, Andrew |title=The Life and Art of Vladimir Nabokov |publisher=Crown Publishers, Inc, New York (1977), ISBN 0-517-56113-1]The French writer
René Crevel killed himself the night ofJune 18 ,1935 . Crevel's suicide was in part due to the conflict betweenAndré Breton and Ehrenburg during the first "International Congress of Writers for the Defense of Culture". Breton, along with all fellowsurrealist s, had been insulted by Ehrenburg in a pamphlet which said, among other things, that all surrealists werepederast s. Breton slapped Ehrenburg several times on the street, which led to surrealists being expelled from the Congress. Crevel, who according toSalvador Dalí , was "the only seriouscommunist among surrealists", spent a whole day trying to persuade the other delegates to allow surrealists back. However, Crevel was not successful and left the Congress at 11 pm, totally exhausted.In "Ilya Ehrenburg", Shneiderman described the threefold division of that great writer's identity: Jew, Russian writer, and man of Western European culture.
Controversies
One of the major controversies surrounding Ehrenburg is that during
World War II he exhorted Soviet troops to kill the Germans that they encountered, as they advanced. Ehrenburg allegedly authored a leaflet entitled "Kill," which was circulated among the soldiers on the Eastern Front::"Now we understand the Germans are not human. Now the word 'German' has become the most terrible curse. Let us not speak. Let us not be indignant. Let us kill. If you do not kill a German, a German will kill you. He will carry away your family, and torture them in his damned Germany. If you have killed one German, kill another." [http://www.sovlit.com/bios/ehrenburg.html]
Some historians attribute Ehrenburg's message as a motivating factor for the violence against German civilians that took place as Soviet troops advanced through Nazi occupied territory toward the end of the war. "Убей немца" literally translates as "kill the German man".
Other historians challenge Ehrenburg's authorship of the infamous "Kill" leaflet. Their arguments are based on the absence of known original Soviet copies of the leaflet from archives and an article by the alleged author in the
Krasnaya Zvezda dated November 24, 1944 in which Ehrenburg explicitly denies his authorship of the "Kill" leaflet. [http://www.idgr.de/texte/legenden/ehrenburg/ehrenb-ifz.php] (German).References
External links
* [http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/black_book/Black_Book.html The Black Book] at jewishgen.org
* [http://www.joshuarubenstein.com/rubenstein/tangled/tangled.html Tangled Loyalties, the 'definitive' Ehrenburg biography by Joshua Rubenstein] at the book's home on the web
* [http://www.sovlit.com/bios/ehrenburg.html Long biography, includes quote above]
* [http://www.bartleby.com/65/eh/Ehrenbur.html Article in The Columbia Encyclopedia]
* [http://www.soviethistory.org/index.php?action=L2&SubjectID=1954thaw&Year=1954 Brief page on "The Thaw"]
* [http://www.rusmuseum.ru/eng/exhibitions/?id=140&i=4&year=2003&pic=4 Marevna, "Homage to Friends from Montparnasse" (1962)] Top left to right:Diego Rivera , Ilya Ehrenburg,Chaim Soutine ,Amedeo Modigliani , his wifeJeanne Hébuterne ,Max Jacob , gallery owner Leopold Zborowski [http://www.imageartsetc.com/stock-images/detail.asp?pid=1406] [http://www.imageartsetc.com/stock-images/detail.asp?pid=1428] . Bottom left to right:Marevna , hers and Diego Rivera's daughter Marika, (Amedeo Modigliani),Moise Kisling .
* [http://www.theparisreview.org/viewinterview.php/prmMID/4636 Read Ehrenburg's interview with The Paris Review]
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