Kamis, 08 Januari 2015

Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

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Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun



Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

Ebook PDF Online Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

This story has two authors: the father (his diaries and letters) and the son (direct speech). The father was born in the late nineteenth century, the son - in 1937. That was a terrible year for Russia - the tragic trait that separated father and son for many years.

Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #579538 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-12
  • Original language: Russian
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .73" w x 6.00" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages
Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun


Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

Where to Download Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Two biographies By Boris Shmulyian The book is comprised of three components: two bios (of the narrator, Sergey Broun, and of his father, Yonah Broun) plus an extensive compilation of historical details about the leaders of nascent Soviet Russia and the USSR.The life of Yonah Broun, while remarkable, has actually been quite typical for that epoch. It's 1917, he is a 19 year old, semi-literate son of a tailor in a remote "shtetl", yet he is faced with an ultimate choice: either to stay put in the "shtetl" forever, or join the Bolsheviks so the entire world would be at his feet. So what did he choose?He became a hardline Bolshevik, and has been faithfully obeying whichever orders the party (represented by higher-ranking officials) would give him. Particularly impressive is his last "official" job, in the commission of the Politbureau regulating Soviet people's travel abroad. That's undoubtedly one of the darkest collective brainchilds of the Bolshevism, a ban on foreign travel without a special permission!And then repressions, an archetypal consequence. Especially touching Yonah's attempts to regain a leadership role post-rehabilitation: all of those spots have already been taken by the representatives of next generation. And that's where the narrator (Sergey Broun) is right: how can one judge his father out of the historical context!Sergey Broun's biography is also typical for his time. Born in the "House on the Embankment", the most exclusive apartment complex for party leaders at the time, he then moved over the entire country with the rest of the family as a ChSIR, or a "member of the family of a traitor of the Motherland".I find it somewhat instructive to compare my own bio with Sergei's as we are of the same age. Mine fits squarely into "born, lived, studies, worked". On the other hand, Sergey -- as a boy, an adolescent, and a youth -- did everything (and could do anything) under the severe circumstances of his uneasy life, such as playing soccer, milking goats, and much more. The transcripts of Sergey's encounters with remarkable people are quite fascinating.The third component of the book is useful but, in my opinion, way too lengthy.Overall, the book is extremely interesting, captivating, and lively. Highly recommended

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Excellent book, interesting and informative. By Elvira S. Just read it. An amazing book! It was certainly an interesting read. The book tells about everything: the unique fate of the father, the civil war, the revolution leaders, labour camps, tortures, the author’s family, Russia, and even the history of the world Jewry. I found a lot of new material in the book. The documentary novel focuses on the memoirs of the author’s father, Iona Broun, a steadfast Bolshevik, who went through the civil war, was shot by the White Guard, and has miraculously survived. Later, he worked at the Central Committee of the Communist Party, was persecuted, and went through prisons, camps, and exiles. Despite all the horrors inflicted by the State, he kept loyalty to the utopian ideals of Communism. Some documents and eyewitness reports (e.g., about Bluher’s death) I have not seen on-line before. The author’s father wrote his memoirs since 1956. Sergey Broun comments on the memoirs, supplementing them with facts which have been published later, and adds a host of interesting documents and photos. The author humorously and fluently narrates about himself, his mother, his family, and his father’s friends, about a hard life in the places of exile, and about the beginning of his own independent life. The book helps understand how our fathers and grandfathers survived in the horrible Stalin’s time.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Personal evidence from a man who survived the era that became a tragedy for the country and millions of its citizens. By David Z. I was lucky to have a chance to read this book. It is a harrowing document, a personal evidence from a man who survived the era that became a tragedy for the country and millions of its citizens. The author incorporated the diary of his father verbatim. The father was a high-ranking party official, who had access to the Leader, was unequivocally devoted to the communist ideals and personally to Lenin. This man went through each and every circle of the inferno, and remained unbroken and pure, and the reader becomes co-participant in these past events. It is hard to believe that such events could happen in the world of our fathers and grandfathers, but the author proves it with the unique archive documents, many of which have never been published, and the reader can witness the horrible past personally. This book is yet another documentary evidence of the crimes without statute of limitation. It is heartrending to read some chapters of the book, but we need to know the truth so that the nightmares of 1937 do not return and invade our lives.

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Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun
Do not judge (Russian Edition), by Sergey Broun

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