Babi Yar 2

Babi Yar – Analysis Of The Poem Essay, Research Paper


Yevtushenko speaks in first person throughout the poem. This


creates the tone of him being in the shoes of the Jews. As he says in


lines 63-64, “No Jewish blood is mixed in mine, but let me be a Jew .


. . ” He writes the poem to evoke compassion for the Jews and make


others aware of their hardships and injustices. “Only then can I call


myself Russian.” (lines 66-67). The poet writes of a future time when


the Russian people realize that the Jews are people as well accept


them as such. If you hate the Jews, he asks, why not hate me as well?


True peace and unity will only occur when they have accepted everyone,


including the Jews.


Stanza I describes the forest of Babi Yar, a ravine on the


outskirts of Kiev. It was the site of the Nazi massacre of more than


thirty thousand Russian Jews on September 29-30, 1941. There is no


memorial to the thirty thousand, but fear pervades the area. Fear that


such a thing could occur at the hands of other humans. The poet feels


the persecution and pain and fear of the Jews who stood there in this


place of horror. Yevtushenko makes himself an Israelite slave of Egypt


and a martyr who died for the sake of his religion. In lines 7-8, he


claims that he still bars the marks of the persecution of the past.


There is still terrible persecution of the Jews in present times


because of their religion. These lines serve as the transition from


the Biblical and ancient examples he gives to the allusions of more


recent acts of hatred. The lines also allude to the fact that these


Russian Jews who were murdered at Babi Yar were martyrs as well.


The next ezza reminds us of another event in Jewish history


where a Jew was persecuted solely because of his religious beliefs.


The poet refers to the “pettiness” (line 11) of anti-Semitism as the


cause of Dreyfus’ imprisonment. Anti-Semitism is his “betrayer” (line


12) when he is framed, and anti-Semitism is his “judge” (line 12) when


he is wrongly found guilty. Lines 13-14 claim that even the fine and


supposedly civilized women of society shun Dreyfus because he is a Jew


and fear him like they would fear an animal.


In ezza III, Yevtushenko brings himself to the midst of the


pogroms of Bielostok. He gives the readers the image of a young


boy on the floor being beaten and bleeding while he witnesses others


beat his mother. In line 24, he gives the reader the rationale of the


Russians who are inflicting such atrocities on the Jews. “‘Murder the


Jews! Save Russia!’” They view the Jews as the curse of Russia;


a Jewish plague that must end in order to save their country from


evil. In a way they think that they are acting in patriotism.


The poet transports us to Anne Frank’s attic in the fourth ezza.


He describes to the reader the innocent love that has blossomed


between Anne and Paul. Her love of the world and life and spring has


been denied her (line 30). Yet, she manages to find comfort for her


loss in the embrace of her beloved. In line 33, Yevtushenko shows the


reader Anne’s denial of what is going on around her. She tries to


drown out the noise of the Nazis coming to get her. When her precious


spring comes, so do the war and the Nazis to take her to her death.


Stanza V brings us back to the ravine of Babi Yar. In line 40, the


poet chooses to personify the trees. They “stare down” on him in


judgement as G-d would. Line 41 is oxymoronic. There is a silent


mourning for the martyred Jews by the air; a force in nature. The air


around Babi Yar howls for the massacre it has witnessed. The poet


himself claims to be “an endless soundless howl/ over the buried”


(lines 43-44). He is a mourner for the thirty thousand, but there is


nothing that can be said. He writes that e is every one of thirty


thousand and feels their pain and injustice. “In no limb of my body


can I forget.” (line 57). His physical body feels their pain. “Limbs”


depicts an image of mangled bodies in the mass grave of Babi Yar.


Stanza VI begins with Yevtushenko reminding the Russian people of


their ability to be good hearted and moral. He speaks of “men with


dirty hands” (lines 52-53). Fascists, Nazis whose hands are covered in


the blood of the innocent, come to Russia and cause the Russians to


close their magnanimous hearts. The tone of lines 52-54 is cruel and


harsh like the actions of the Nazis. These hateful people claim to


bring “the union of the Russian people” (line 59). He makes a point of


referring to these people as “anti-Semites” (line 57) because the Jews


are Russians, too. The Nazis in effect have turned Russian against


Russian – hardly a “union.”


In the last ezza, the poet calls for world unity which will only


occur when anti-Semitism has ended. He is not a Jew, yet he equates


himself to one. If all Russians are people, then the Jews are no less


Russian or less human than he himself. If this is the way you treat


these Russian people, he is trying to express, then treat me, a “real”


Russian, as you have treated the Russian Jews. Only then will all


Russians truly be united and equal.


Yevtushenko is a supporter of the Jewish plight. He sees the


injustice that they have been subject to and feels responsible for it


in a way. He tries to rationalize why his people, the Russians, have


acted so immorally and blames their actions on the influence of


others. He calls to his people to reform; simultaneously urging the


Jews not to blame them entirely for their actions and to show that


they do have natural goodness within them.

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