Volodymyr Yavorivsky

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Volodymyr Yavorivsky
Володимир Яворівський
Володимир Яворівський - 19031889.jpg
People's Deputy of Ukraine
In office
May 2002 – November 2014[1]
Personal details
Born(1942-10-11)11 October 1942
, Jugastru county, Romania
Died17 April 2021(2021-04-17) (aged 78)
NationalityUkrainian
Political partyAll-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland"[2]
Spouse(s)Halyna Oleksandrivna (1946, actress)[3]
ChildrenSon Svyatoslav (1964, journalist), daughter Olesya (1978)[3]
ResidenceKyiv, Ukraine
Alma materOdessa State University
OccupationPolitician
ProfessionPoet, writer, journalist
Signature
Websitewww.yavorivskyi.org.ua/ (in Ukrainian)

Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Yavorivsky (Ukrainian: Володимир Олександрович Яворівський; 11 October 1942 – 17 April 2021) was a Ukrainian poet, writer, journalist and politician.

Biography[]

Born in 1942 in the Crijopol region of Jugastru county (today part of Vinnytsia Oblast), Yavorivsky graduated from the Odessa State University as a specialist on "Ukrainian language and literature". He worked as an editor on the local radio, as a newspaper reporter ("Zaporizka pravda", "Literaturna Ukraina", "Prapor Yunosti"), a scriptwriter on Lviv television, a literary consultant, a referent of the Writer's Union of Ukraine and as the department chief and deputy editor to Vitchizna Magazine.

In the late 1980s, Yavorivsky began his active political career. He was a people's deputy of the last Supreme Soviet of the USSR in 1989–1991 and became one of the founders of People's Movement of Ukraine.

Volodymyr Yavorivsky took active part in defending the rights of the Chernobyl accident victims.

In the 4th Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine (2002–2006), Volodymyr Yavorivsky belonged to the Our Ukraine fraction and in the 5th and 6th Rada convocation to the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc fraction.[4] In the 2012 parliamentary election he was (re)-elected into parliament by winning a constituency in Kyiv for Batkivschyna.[5]

Yavorivsky combined parliamentary functions with the position of the Writer's Union of Ukraine Chairman (appointed October 2001).[3]

In the 2014 parliamentary election Yavorivsky again tried to win a constituency seat in Kyiv for Batkivschyna, but failed this time having finished fourth in his constituency with 13.72% of votes.[6][7] The winner of the constituency, Boryslav Bereza, gained 29.44% of the votes.[7]

He died on the 17th April 2021, aged 78.[8]

Published works[]

Short story collections[]

  • A yabluka padayut (The apples are falling), 1968
  • Гроно стиглого винограду (A cluster of mature grapes), 1971

Sketch collections[]

  • Kryla vygostreni nebom (Wings sharpened by heaven), 1975
  • Tut na zemli (Here on the ground), 1977
  • I v mori pamyatayu dzherelo (Remembering the source even at the sea), 1980
  • Pravo vlasnogo imeni (The right of the own name), 1985
  • Shcho my za narod takyi? (What a people are we?), 2002

Stories[]

  • Z vysoty veresnya (From the height of September), 1984
  • Vichni Kortelisy, 1984

Novels[]

  • Lantsiugova reakciya (Chain reaction), 1978 about Chernobyl
  • Oglyansya z oseni, 1979
  • Avtoportret z uyavy (Biography of Catherine Bilokur), 1980
  • Maria z polynom u kintsi stolittya, 1988, about the Chernobyl disaster
  • Kryza (Crisis), 2000

References[]

  1. ^ Five factions form Verkhovna Rada coalition, Interfax-Ukraine (27 November 2014)
    Poroshenko guesses parliamentary coalition to be slightly larger, Interfax-Ukraine (27 November 2014)
    Governing coalition formed in parliament, UNIAN (27 November 2014)
  2. ^ (in Ukrainian)Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc election list, Central Election Commission of Ukraine
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c (in Ukrainian)Biography, Довідники про сучасну Україну
  4. ^ (in Ukrainian)Profile, Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine
  5. ^ Residents of Kyiv vote for opposition representatives in single-seat constituencies, Kyiv Post (November 1, 2012)
  6. ^ (in Russian) Short bio, LIGA
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b (in Ukrainian) Candidates and winner for the seat in constituency 213 in the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election Archived December 9, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, RBK Ukraine
  8. ^ Умер писатель и общественный деятель Владимир Яворивский

External links[]

Cultural offices
Preceded by
Oles Honchar
Shevchenko National Prize Committee Chair
1996 – 1999
Succeeded by
Ivan Dziuba
Retrieved from ""