Sergey Izgiyayev
Sergey Davidovich Izgiyayev | |
---|---|
Sergey Izgiyayev in 1970. | |
Born | Mushkur (Nyugdi), Dagestan ASSR, USSR | 24 November 1922
Died | 27 July 1972 Derbent, Dagestan ASSR, USSR | (aged 49)
Occupation | Poet |
Notable awards | 1965: Jubilee Medal "Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945" |
Sergey Davidovich Izgiyayev (Template:Lang-ru; Template:Lang-he; born 24 November 1922 – 27 July 1972) was a member of the Union of Soviet Writers, the author of nine books of poetry and five plays, the translator and creator of lyrics for more than thirty songs (nine of which were produced by Moscow's firm Melodiya on Gramophone records).[1] He was of Mountain Jew descent.
Biography
Sergey Izgiyayev was born in Myushkyur, a village located south-east of the town of Derbent, in the Republic of Dagestan, on the river Gyul'gerychay. Its modern name is Nyugdi. His parents, Dovid-Haim and Leah, had seven children, including three sons and four daughters. Sergey Izgiyayev was the only one of the parent's three sons to live to adulthood. His brother Hizgie, when he was a child, accidentally fell into a flamed tandoor oven, and burned to death. His other brother Gadmil died of typhoid fever in his early teens. His sisters Sariah, Mazaltu, Tirso and Shushen survived to adulthood.[2]
Sergey Izgiyayev started writing poems as a child.[3] In 1939, the regional newspaper Red Star (in the language of the Mountain Jews) published a large collection of his poems. Later that year he married Sarah Shamailov (1923-1978). Her contemporaries, men and women alike, thought that she was a beautiful woman.[2] Sergey Izgiyayev was dedicated to her many lyric poems.[1]
From 1940 to 1946 Sergey Izgiyayev was in the military, where he continued to write and publish in the military press. After demobilization, Izgiyayev went to school and graduated from a Pedagogical College while working at the local radio station. In 1947, Sergey Izgiyayev participated in the first congress for young writers in Dagestan.[3] In the early 1960s, he earned his MA in education. From 1961 he served as the chairman of a collective farm (kolkhoz), and was the head of the department of culture of Derbent District Executive Committee, among other leadership positions. In 1963, Sergey Izgiyayev was accepted to the Union of Soviet Writers.[3]
In addition to poetry, Sergey Izgiyayev wrote stage plays for the Judeo-Tat Theatre. He translated poems and plays from Russian, Avar, Azerbaijani, and other languages into his native Mountain Jew’s language, Juhuri. He also translated the libretto of Uzeyir Hajibeyov's opera Layla and Majnun, and poems by Mikhail Lermontov, Suleyman Stalsky, Gamzat Tsadasa, Rasul Gamzatov and other poets. His second major work in translation involved a poem in Avar called (Juhuri:«Буьлуьнде астарегьо». 1968.)[4] - High Stars written by a national Dagestani poet Rasul Gamzatov. Izgiyayev's son David commented on this in an article:[1]
"My father was friends with Rasul Gamzatov, who repeatedly visited my father at a party, but I particularly remember his visit with Murat Kazhlaev (composer of Dagestan), to finalize the book to print…"
About thirty of Sergey Izgiyayev's poems became songs. David, his son, wrote:[1]
"Daddy's songs, especially Gyulboor, are still sung by people in Russia, Israel, America and Europe…"
Many Dagestani composers such as Baba Guliyev, Jumshud Ashurov and Juno Avshalumov wrote music based on poetry written by Sergey Izgiyayev.[5]
Izgiyayev dedicated many poems to his wife Sarah, one of them was To the beloved that written by him while still the groom. A poem Daughter Sveta he dedicated to his youngest daughter.[1]
Izgiyayev died on 27 July 1972 and was buried at the Jewish cemetery in Derbent.[1]
Family
The eldest son Rashi (1947-2009) died in Derbent. The other children Leah (Lisa), David, Ruspo (Rosa), Svetlana and grandchildren live in Israel.
Books
During Izgiyayev's lifetime, five book collections of his poems and plays were published. Those included:
- (Juhuri:Иму гъэлхэнд шолуминим) - We are the defenders of the World (1952)[6]
- (Juhuri:МэгIнигьой жовони) - Songs of Youth (1959)[7]
In 1959, along with many other poets, Sergey Izgiyayev published his poems in a literary anthology (Juhuri:Сесгьой жовонгьо) - Voices of the Young.
- (Juhuri:Стихигьо) - Poems (1963)[8]
- (Juhuri:Фикиргьой шогьир) - Thoughts of the Poet (1966)[9]
- (Juhuri:Суьгьбет э дуьлевоз) - A conversation with the heart (1970)[10]
Poems published posthumously
- (Juhuri:Муьгьбет ве гьисмет) - The fate and love (1972)[11]
- (Juhuri:Э иму ижире гIэдоти) - This is our custom (1977)[12]
- (Juhuri:Стихигьо ве поэма) - Poetry and Poem (1981)[13]
- Selected works (2002)[14]
Books exhibition
-
We are the defenders of the World (1952)[6]
-
Songs of Youth (1959)[7]
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Poems (1963)[8]
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Thoughts of the Poet (1966)[9]
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A conversation with the heart (1970)[10]
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The fate and love (1972)[11]
-
This is our custom (1977)[12]
-
Poetry and Poem (1981)[13]
-
Selected works (2002)[14]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Memories of my father - David Izgiyayev
- ^ a b Poet’s family
- ^ a b c Sergey Izgiyayev - the Mountain Jewish poet and translator
- ^ (Juhuri:Буьлуьнде астарегьо). Translated by Sergey Izgiyayev. Poem "High Stars" by Rasul Gamzatov, Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 198, 11.4×14.8 cm, 1000 copies, 1968
- ^ "Sergey Izgiyayev - in people's memory - Boris Edigarov". jtimes.ru. 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2011-07-15.
- ^ a b (Juhuri:Иму гъэлхэнд шолуминим) - "We are the defenders of the World", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 88, 12.5×18 cm, 500 copies, 1952
- ^ a b (Juhuri:МэгIнигьой жовони) - "Songs of Youth", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 112, 11×17 cm, 1000 copies, 1959
- ^ a b (Juhuri:Стихигьо) - "Poems", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 108, 10.9×16.7 cm, 1000 copies, 1963
- ^ a b (Juhuri:Фикиргьой шогьир) - "Thoughts of the Poet", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 79, 10.9×16.4 cm, 1500 copies, 1966
- ^ a b (Juhuri:Суьгьбет э дуьлевоз) - "A conversation with the heart", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 104, 10.5×13.9 cm, 1000 copies, 1970
- ^ a b (Juhuri:Муьгьбет ве гьисмет) - "The fate and love", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 128, 13×17 cm, 1000 copies, 1972
- ^ a b (Juhuri:Э иму ижире гIэдоти») - "This is our custom", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 84, 10.7×16.5 cm, 1000 copies, 1977
- ^ a b (Juhuri:Стихигьо ве поэма) - "Poetry and Poem", Dagestan ASSR, Soviet Union, pp. 88, 10.7×16.2 cm, 1000 copies, 1981
- ^ a b "Selected works", Saint Petersburg, Russia, pp. 288, 15×21.6 cm, 350 copies, 2002
External links
- 1922 births
- 1972 deaths
- People from Derbentsky District
- Mountain Jews
- Judeo-Tat poets
- Judeo-Tat playwrights
- Soviet Jews
- Russian male poets
- Soviet poets
- Russian dramatists and playwrights
- Russian male dramatists and playwrights
- Soviet dramatists and playwrights
- Soviet male writers
- 20th-century Russian male writers
- Translators to Judeo-Tat
- Soviet translators
- Translators from Russian
- Translators from Azerbaijani
- 20th-century Russian translators
- Writers from Dagestan
- Poets from Dagestan
- Writers from Derbent
- Poets from Derbent