Tolya Yakobson of Khylnovsky Lane

$299.99

After the Prague Spring of 1968, Soviet Jewry was never the same

Produced and Directed by

Sergei Linkov

Film Details

Russian with English  and German subtitles

90 min.

Color

DVD and Digital Streaming License

Film Topics

Soviet Jewry, Jewish History, Russian History, Israel, Poetry, Prague Spring

About the Film

A seminal figure, yet not well known in Jewish History Tolya Yakobson a school teacher, poet, translator, literary critic, and  – –  a critically important Soviet Jewish dissident.

About the Film

After the Prague Spring of 1968 Yakobson began publishing “The Chronicles of Current Events”protesting the persecution of meskhs, the trials of Crimean Tatars, unlawful imprisonments and multiple violations of religious freedoms of people in Ukraine, Caucasus, and Lithuania making it known around the world. He introduced a radical literary column called  “Jewish movement for Immigrating to Israel” to the publication. Together with the leader of Moscow Zionist movement, Meir Gelfond, Yakobson published detailed accounts of unjust trials, unlawful dismissals, provocations in many cities and towns of the Soviet Union. The film also tells the story of unknown people, who at great risk, helped to publish the famous “Chronicles of Current Events.” 

A close friend from these early years remembers, “We bonded immediately over our love for poetry. We, Tolya and I, lived and breathed poetry back then; it was the most important thing to us.”  It is the poetry, Russian poetry that guided him through life.

“After Prague Spring,1968 ~ nothing was the same”  

In 1972 the KGB forced Yakobson to choose between prison and exile. He emigrated to Israel and died 6 years later. A stone in the cemetery on the Mount of Olives near Jerusalem, bears the name Anatoly Yakobson, 1935-1978 written in Russian and Hebrew. The life and faith of Anatoly Yakobson is intricately woven into contemporary history.

Praise for Tolya Yakobson of Khylnovsky Lane

“I was so impressed with the film that I am showing it to my undergraduate seminar on Human Rights in Russia, and a survey class on Modern and Contemporary Russia.

Dr. Semion Lyandres
History Department, University of Notre Dame

Screenings and Film Festivals

New York City, Russian Documentary Film Festival, Official Selection
Boston, Massachusetts, West Newton Cinema, Boston University
Berlin, Germany – Cinema Club
Bremen, Germany – University, Institute of History and Culture Of East Europe
Moscow, Russian – All Russian Institute of Cinematography
Moscow State Pedagodgical University, Moscow, Russian
Moscow, Russia, Academician A.D. Sakharov Center

(c) 2015 Sergei Linkov

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