Each person is born into this world for happiness. This idea has been repeatedly expressed by the classics of Russian and world literature. Some of them not only expressed, but defended in every possible way. The fates of these writers were different. Few Russian citizens know and remember today the name of Yulia Nikolaevna Voznesenskaya.
Happy childhood
The history of human civilization contains many plots and parables about how a person can come to God. Centuries fly by, but the human essence remains unchanged. When it comes to the fate of Yulia Nikolaevna Voznesenskaya, the first reaction comes down to feeling sorry for her. With further analysis of the biography and character of this woman, other associations arise. There is a desire to read the books that she wrote. Get acquainted with poems written at different stages of life.
The future poet and emigrant was born on September 14, 1940 in a military family. Parents lived in Leningrad. My father held high positions in the technical troops of the Red Army. Julia grew up in greenhouse conditions. Of course, during the war, she, with her mother and brother, drank dashing in the evacuation. But in 1945, after the Victory, the head of the family took them with him to Berlin, where he served for almost five years. During this time, the smart child has decently learned German.
Returning to her native land, Julia continued her studies in an ordinary Soviet school. She watched with her own eyes how her peers, whose parents worked in factories and construction sites, lived. Having received a certificate of maturity, the girl decided to enter the famous Leningrad Institute of Cinema, Theater and Music. But literally a year later, I realized that it was more profitable to get a medical education. Her studies went wrong again, and the girl became seriously interested in journalism.
Creativity and deprivation
The girl was barely twenty years old when she left the city on the Neva and moved to Murmansk, where she began working as a journalist for a local newspaper. A career as a correspondent, although not immediately, she developed. Simultaneously with notes and sketches, Julia wrote poetry. In 1964, her first poem appeared in the press. Over the next years, the young poetess was supported in every possible way and published in various publications. Returning to her hometown, she immediately plunged into the protest movement. The poem "Invasion" was written in response to the events of 1968 in Czechoslovakia.
Julia Nikolaevna, as a nature carried away, took the problems and pain of the people around her to heart. She took an active part in various activities directed against Soviet power. Ultimately, the protesting poet was convicted and served a real term in the camp. After her release in 1980, Voznesenskaya was forced to emigrate to West Germany. Nobody was waiting for her here. She could not find a decent job for a long time. But over time, everything settled down.
Yulia Nikolaevna's personal life was uneven. She was married twice. The surname, under which she lived her entire adult life, went to the writer from her first spouse. In the second marriage, two sons were born. Husband and wife raised them in a European way. Julia Voznesenskaya died on February 20, 2015 in Berlin.