Andrej Makajonak
Andrej Jahorawich Makajonak (1920 - 1982), Belarusian comedian.
In 1939 he began military service in the Georgian SSR, during World War II he participated in the Soviet-British Operation Y in Iran, later fought in the Caucasus, took part in the Crimean descent. Severely wounded during the German counter-offensive in April 1942, threatened with leg amputation, was demobilized. He spent the rest of the war in Georgia and Belarus. Since 1944 he was the Komsomol district secretary, and since 1945 he has been working in the party apparatus of the KPB. After completing the 1949 ideological school at the Central Committee of the PSC, he was sent to work in the editorial office of the satirical magazine Woźniak (Jeżyk) in Belarusian language. In the same year he became a member of the Union of Writers of the USSR. In the years 1966-1977 he was the editor of the magazine Nieman, a body of the Union of Soviet Writers of Belarus. In 1966, as a member of the Belarussian delegation, he participated in the UN General Assembly. In the period 1971-1982 he was deputy to the Supreme Soviet of the Belarusian ZRR. The most important works are: Forgiving kali grace (1953), Tribune (1970), The thrill of salvation (1982). The last of the work was a tragicomedy devoted to the threat of nuclear catastrophe.
wiki
Comments
Post a Comment