Difference between pages "Zulfiya Abdiqadir" and "Yuliy Kim"

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{{Infobox Officeholder
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{{Infobox person
| name               = Zulfiya Abdiqadir
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| name         = Yuliy Chersanovich Kim
| native_name         = {{nobold|زولفيا عبدالقادر<Br>{{lang|zh-hans|祖丽菲娅·阿不都卡德尔}}}}
+
| native_name   = Юлий Черсанович Ким
| office              = Head of the Transport Department of [[Xinjiang|Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region]]
+
| image        = Yuly Kim.jpg
| term_start          = 24 July 2015
+
| alt          =  
| term_end            =  
+
| caption      =  
| predecessor        = Lijiati Sulitang (里加提·苏里堂)
+
| birth_name    =  
| successor          =
+
| birth_date    = {{birth date and age|1936|12|23}}
| office1            = Bureau Chief of the [[Xinjiang|Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region]] Regional Road Transportation Administrative Bureau
+
| birth_place  = [[Moscow]]  
| term_start1        = August 2008
+
| death_date    =  
| term_end1          = 14 July 2015
+
| death_place  =  
| predecessor1        = Ai'erken Abudureyimu (艾尔肯·阿不都热依木)
+
| nationality  = Russian
| successor1          = Yilihamu Abulaiti (依力哈木·阿不来提)
+
| citizenship  = {{Flag|Soviet Union}} (1936–1991) → {{Flag|Russia}} (1991–present), {{Flag|Israel}} (1998–present)
| birth_date          = {{birth-date and age|df=yes|May 1966}}
+
| other_names  =  
| birth_place        = [[Yining City|Yining]] (Ghulja), [[Xinjiang]], China
+
| occupation    = poet, singer-songwriter
| nationality        = People's Republic of China
+
| years_active  =
| party              = [[Communist Party of China]]
+
| known_for    = his songs and human rights activism
| spouse              =
+
| movement      = [[dissident movement in the Soviet Union]]
| children            =  
+
| alma_mater    = [[Moscow State Pedagogical University]]
| residence          =  
+
| awards        = [[Medal Defender of a Free Russia]]
| education          = [[Xinjiang Agricultural University|Xinjiang Eighteen Agricultural Institute]]<br>Chinese Communist Party School of Xinjiang
+
| notable_works =
| religion            =
+
| parents      = Kim Chersan and Nina Valentinovna Vsesvyatskaya
 
}}
 
}}
'''Zulfiya Abdiqadir''' is a [[Uyghurs|Uyghur]] [[Civil service|civil servant]] in the [[People's Republic of China]].
 
  
==Education==
+
'''Yuliy Chersanovich Kim''' ({{lang-ru|Ю́лий Черса́нович Ким}}; born 23 December 1936, [[Moscow]]) is one of [[Russia]]'s foremost [[bard (Soviet Union)|bard]]s, composer, poet,  songwriter for [[play (theatre)|theater]] and films. His songs, encompassing everything from mild humor to biting political satire, appear in at least fifty Soviet movies, including ''[[Bumbarash]]'', ''[[The Twelve Chairs (1976 film)|The Twelve Chairs]]'', and ''[[An Ordinary Miracle (1978 film)|An Ordinary Miracle]]'', as well as the songs "The Brave Captain," "The Black Sea," "The Whale-Fish," "Cursed Lips," "Captain Bering," and "Baron Germont Went to War."  Since 1998, he has been living in [[Israel]] and has made periodic tours through Russia, [[Europe]], and the [[United States]].<ref name="booknik">[http://booknik.ru/today/faces/on-s-samogo-detstva-ne-terpel-jidoedstva/ He Couldn't Stand Judophobia Since Childhood] // [[Booknik]], 23 December 2012 (interview, in Russian)</ref>
Abdiqadir completed her [[undergraduate]] degree at what is now the [[Xinjiang Agricultural University]] in [[Ürümqi]]. She completed her [[master's]] at the [[Chinese Communist Party]] School of Xinjiang.<ref name=xjjt>{{cite web | url=http://www.xjjt.gov.cn/article/2014-12-16/art24893.html | title=祖丽菲娅·阿布都卡德尔 | trans-title=Zulfiya Abdiqadir | language=Chinese | website=Xinjiang Transport Department | access-date=24 February 2017}}</ref>
+
  
==Career==
+
==Biography==
In 1984, Abdiqadir joined the science and technology branch of the [[Xinjiang|Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region]] Regional Road Transportation Administrative Bureau. Over the next 18 years, she worked in other branches of the department, including vehicle management, project management, and safety regulations. In 2002, Abdiqadir was appointed the bureau's chief economic engineer.<ref name=xjjt/>
+
  
Abdiqadir became a member of the bureau's Party Committee in 2004. In 2007, she was appointed deputy bureau chief and put in charge of administrative affairs. Less than one year later, Abdiqadir became deputy secretary of the bureau's Party Committee, as well as bureau chief.<ref name=xjjt/>
+
Kim was born in 1936 in Moscow to Kim Chersan, a journalist of [[Koreans|Korean]] descent, and Nina Valentinovna Vsesvyatskaya, a teacher of [[Russian language]] and literature of [[Russians|Russian]] origin.<ref name="booknik"/><ref>[http://2003.novayagazeta.ru/nomer/2003/95n/n95n-s20.shtml Yuliy Kim, a happy son of Gulag], [[Novaya Gazeta]]</ref> His parents were victims of the [[Great Purge]] of 1937 and 1938, in which his father was executed and his mother was sentenced as a "[[Traitor of Motherland Family Member|family member of a traitor of the Motherland]]" to five years in a [[labor camp]] and three years of [[exile]], so that Kim didn't see her until age 9. She was [[rehabilitate (Soviet)|rehabilitate]]d during the [[Khrushchev Thaw]] period in 1958, but before that, she was under the  "[[101st kilometer]]" law and could not live in Moscow, so Kim's family settled in [[Maloyaroslavets]], [[Kaluga Oblast]]. In 1951, the family moved to [[Turkmenistan]]. Kim returned to Moscow in 1954 to enter the [[Moscow State Pedagogical Institute]].
  
She served as a representative for Xinjiang at the [[11th National People's Congress]] from 2008 to 2013.<ref name=ce>{{cite web | url=http://district.ce.cn/newarea/sddy/201507/25/t20150725_6037394.shtml | editor-last1=Zhuang 庄 | editor-first1=Yu 彧 | title=祖丽菲娅·阿不都卡德尔(女)任新疆自治区交通厅厅长 | trans-title=Zulfiya Abdiqadir (female) is appointed head of the Transport Department of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region | language=Chinese | website=China Economic News | date=25 July 2015 | access-date=24 February 2017}}</ref>
+
In 1959, Kim graduated from the Department of History and Philology of [[Moscow State Pedagogical University]]. During his student years, he began writing poems and setting some of them to music. Upon graduation, he was sent to teach in the village of [[Il'pyrsky]], [[Kamchatka Oblast|Kamchatka]], near [[Anapka]], where he taught for three years. He taught history, [[literature]], [[geography]], and other subjects, and also directed a number of [[musical theater|musical]] plays with the schoolchildren.  Since then, the sea has become one of the main themes of his songs.
  
In 2015, Abdiqadir was appointed to head of the Transport Department of [[Xinjiang|Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region]] and became the deputy secretary of the department's Party Committee.<ref name=xjjt/>
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In 1969, he signed An Appeal to The UN Committee for Human Rights.<ref>{{cite journal|author1=Yakobson, Anatoly |author2=Yakir, Pyotr |author3=Khodorovich, Tatyana |author4=Podyapolskiy, Gregory |author5=Maltsev, Yuri |title=An Appeal to The UN Committee for Human Rights|journal=[[The New York Review of Books]]|date=21 August 1969|url=http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/1969/aug/21/an-appeal-to-the-un-committee-for-human-rights/|display-authors=etal}}</ref>
  
==References==
+
After returning to [[Moscow]], Kim taught school, and at the same time participated in the [[dissident]] movement, which cost him his job in 1968.  Subsequently, Kim earned a living by writing songs for plays and movies as well as publishing plays under the [[pseudonym]] Yu. Mikhailov, which he used until 1986.  At the same time, while he was barred from giving concerts, he continued his singing underground.
 +
 
 +
With the advent of [[glasnost]], Kim was finally able to perform legally.  Since the breakup of the Soviet Union, he has been acclaimed throughout the [[Russian language|Russian]]-speaking world and has performed in numerous locations in Russia, Europe, and the United States.  He has received numerous awards, such as the [[Bulat Okudzhava]] Prize of the Russian Federation.
 +
 
 +
Today, Yuliy Kim's discography includes over 20 titles on CD, audio and video tape, and DVD. His songs have been included in almost all anthologies of author’s song as well as many anthologies of modern Russian poetry.
 +
 
 +
His first wife was Irina Yakir — granddaughter of the famous [[Red Army]] commander [[Iona Yakir]]. They married in 1966, and in 1998 they immigrated to Israel. After Irina's death in 1999, Kim married Lidia Lugovaya, Irina's close friend since school days.<ref name="booknik"/><ref>[http://www.1tv.ru/prj/pokavsedoma/vypusk/468 While Everyone's at Home] // [[Channel One Russia]], 21 December 2008 (interview at Kim's apartment)</ref> He currently splits his time between Jerusalem and Moscow.
 +
 
 +
== Selected filmography ==
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
|-  style="background:#b0c4de; text-align:center;"
 +
! Year
 +
! Film
 +
! Original name
 +
! Contribution
 +
 +
|-rowspan="3"
 +
 
 +
|| 1963 || ''Newton Street, House 1'' || ''Улица Ньютона, дом 1'' || Lyrics, vocal, actor (uncredited)
 +
|-
 +
| 1969 || ''[[By the Lake]]'' || ''У озера'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| 1971|| ''[[Bumbarash]]'' || ''Бумбараш'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| 1976 || ''[[The Twelve Chairs (1976 film)|The Twelve Chairs]]'' || ''12 стульев'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| 1977 || ''[[Pro Krasnuyu Shapochku|About Red Riding Hood]]'' || ''Про Красную Шапочку'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
|rowspan="3"| 1978 || ''Cabbages and Kings'' || ''Короли и капуста'' || Lyrics, vocal
 +
|-
 +
| ''Five Evenings'' || ''Пять вечеров'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| ''[[An Ordinary Miracle (1978 film)|An Ordinary Miracle]]'' || ''Обыкновенное чудо'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| 1979 || ''[[Very Blue Beard]]'' || ''Очень синяя борода'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
|rowspan="2"| 1982 || ''[[The Story of Voyages]]'' || ''Сказка странствий'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| ''Along Unknown Paths'' || ''Там, на неведомых дорожках...'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
|rowspan="3"| 1984 || ''Pippi Longstocking'' || ''Пеппи Длинныйчулок'' || Lyrics, vocal
 +
|-
 +
| ''[[Formula of Love]]'' || ''Формула любви'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| ''Make the Clown Laugh'' || ''Рассмешите клоуна'' || Lyrics, vocal
 +
|-
 +
| 1985 || ''After the Rain, on Thursday'' || ''После дождичка в четверг'' || Screenplay, lyrics, actor (uncredited)
 +
|-
 +
| 1987 || ''[[A Man from the Boulevard des Capucines]]'' || ''Человек с бульвара Капуцинов'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
|rowspan="2"| 1988 || ''One, Two — Grief Is No Tragedy!'' || ''Раз, два — горе не беда!'' || Screenplay, lyrics, actor
 +
|-
 +
| ''[[Heart of a Dog (1988 film)|Heart of a Dog]]'' || ''Собачье сердце'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| 1991 || ''Shadow'' || ''Тень, или Может быть, всё обойдётся'' || Lyrics
 +
|-
 +
| 2002 || ''The Unwilling Doctor'' || ''Лекарь поневоле'' || Music, lyrics and vocal
 +
|-
 +
| 2010 || ''The Ugly Duckling'' || ''Гадкий утёнок'' || Lyrics
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
==Notes==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
  
{{DEFAULTSORT:Abdiqadir, Zulfiya}}
+
==External links==
[[Category:Communist Party of China politicians from Xinjiang]]
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{{commons category}}
 +
*{{en icon}} [http://www.russia-ic.com/culture_art/music/446/ Yuliy Kim's bio]
 +
*{{ru icon}} [http://www.bards.ru/person.php?id=1650 Yuliy Kim at bards.ru]
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*{{IMDb name|0453759}}
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{{Soviet dissidents}}
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{{Authority control}}
 +
 
 +
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kim, Yuliy}}
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[[Category:1936 births]]
 +
[[Category:Koryo-saram]]
 
[[Category:Living people]]
 
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:1966 births]]
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[[Category:Russian bards]]
[[Category:Uyghurs]]
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[[Category:Russian singer-songwriters]]
[[Category:Political office-holders in Xinjiang]]
+
[[Category:Soviet dissidents]]
[[Category:People's Republic of China politicians from Xinjiang]]
+
[[Category:Moscow State Pedagogical University alumni]]
 +
[[Category:Russian male singer-songwriters]]
 +
[[Category:Soviet male singer-songwriters]]
 +
[[Category:Russian emigrants to Israel]]
 +
[[Category:Soviet people of Korean descent]]
 +
[[Category:People from Moscow]]

Revision as of 08:30, 12 January 2017

Template:Infobox person

Yuliy Chersanovich Kim (Template:Lang-ru; born 23 December 1936, Moscow) is one of Russia's foremost bards, composer, poet, songwriter for theater and films. His songs, encompassing everything from mild humor to biting political satire, appear in at least fifty Soviet movies, including Bumbarash, The Twelve Chairs, and An Ordinary Miracle, as well as the songs "The Brave Captain," "The Black Sea," "The Whale-Fish," "Cursed Lips," "Captain Bering," and "Baron Germont Went to War." Since 1998, he has been living in Israel and has made periodic tours through Russia, Europe, and the United States.<ref name="booknik">He Couldn't Stand Judophobia Since Childhood // Booknik, 23 December 2012 (interview, in Russian)</ref>

Biography

Kim was born in 1936 in Moscow to Kim Chersan, a journalist of Korean descent, and Nina Valentinovna Vsesvyatskaya, a teacher of Russian language and literature of Russian origin.<ref name="booknik"/><ref>Yuliy Kim, a happy son of Gulag, Novaya Gazeta</ref> His parents were victims of the Great Purge of 1937 and 1938, in which his father was executed and his mother was sentenced as a "family member of a traitor of the Motherland" to five years in a labor camp and three years of exile, so that Kim didn't see her until age 9. She was rehabilitated during the Khrushchev Thaw period in 1958, but before that, she was under the "101st kilometer" law and could not live in Moscow, so Kim's family settled in Maloyaroslavets, Kaluga Oblast. In 1951, the family moved to Turkmenistan. Kim returned to Moscow in 1954 to enter the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute.

In 1959, Kim graduated from the Department of History and Philology of Moscow State Pedagogical University. During his student years, he began writing poems and setting some of them to music. Upon graduation, he was sent to teach in the village of Il'pyrsky, Kamchatka, near Anapka, where he taught for three years. He taught history, literature, geography, and other subjects, and also directed a number of musical plays with the schoolchildren. Since then, the sea has become one of the main themes of his songs.

In 1969, he signed An Appeal to The UN Committee for Human Rights.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

After returning to Moscow, Kim taught school, and at the same time participated in the dissident movement, which cost him his job in 1968. Subsequently, Kim earned a living by writing songs for plays and movies as well as publishing plays under the pseudonym Yu. Mikhailov, which he used until 1986. At the same time, while he was barred from giving concerts, he continued his singing underground.

With the advent of glasnost, Kim was finally able to perform legally. Since the breakup of the Soviet Union, he has been acclaimed throughout the Russian-speaking world and has performed in numerous locations in Russia, Europe, and the United States. He has received numerous awards, such as the Bulat Okudzhava Prize of the Russian Federation.

Today, Yuliy Kim's discography includes over 20 titles on CD, audio and video tape, and DVD. His songs have been included in almost all anthologies of author’s song as well as many anthologies of modern Russian poetry.

His first wife was Irina Yakir — granddaughter of the famous Red Army commander Iona Yakir. They married in 1966, and in 1998 they immigrated to Israel. After Irina's death in 1999, Kim married Lidia Lugovaya, Irina's close friend since school days.<ref name="booknik"/><ref>While Everyone's at Home // Channel One Russia, 21 December 2008 (interview at Kim's apartment)</ref> He currently splits his time between Jerusalem and Moscow.

Selected filmography

Year Film Original name Contribution
1963 Newton Street, House 1 Улица Ньютона, дом 1 Lyrics, vocal, actor (uncredited)
1969 By the Lake У озера Lyrics
1971 Bumbarash Бумбараш Lyrics
1976 The Twelve Chairs 12 стульев Lyrics
1977 About Red Riding Hood Про Красную Шапочку Lyrics
1978 Cabbages and Kings Короли и капуста Lyrics, vocal
Five Evenings Пять вечеров Lyrics
An Ordinary Miracle Обыкновенное чудо Lyrics
1979 Very Blue Beard Очень синяя борода Lyrics
1982 The Story of Voyages Сказка странствий Lyrics
Along Unknown Paths Там, на неведомых дорожках... Lyrics
1984 Pippi Longstocking Пеппи Длинныйчулок Lyrics, vocal
Formula of Love Формула любви Lyrics
Make the Clown Laugh Рассмешите клоуна Lyrics, vocal
1985 After the Rain, on Thursday После дождичка в четверг Screenplay, lyrics, actor (uncredited)
1987 A Man from the Boulevard des Capucines Человек с бульвара Капуцинов Lyrics
1988 One, Two — Grief Is No Tragedy! Раз, два — горе не беда! Screenplay, lyrics, actor
Heart of a Dog Собачье сердце Lyrics
1991 Shadow Тень, или Может быть, всё обойдётся Lyrics
2002 The Unwilling Doctor Лекарь поневоле Music, lyrics and vocal
2010 The Ugly Duckling Гадкий утёнок Lyrics

Notes

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Commons category

Template:Soviet dissidents Template:Authority control