Babiar Yevtushenko's analysis speaks first-person in the whole poem. This made him a Jewish condition. As he said in lines 63-64, "My Jewish blood is not mixed, but please make me a Jew ..." people know their hardships and injustices. "I am the only person who can only call myself a Russian" (lines 66 - 67). The poet wrote that the Russian people and the Jews also realized that they accepted their future age.
The starting point of Yevtushenko's poem is to remember the massacre that happened in Babi Yar. Twenty years after the incident, when he visited Babi Yar, Yevtushenko was shocked to know that the area was illegal dumping. In September 1941, approximately 34,000 Jews massacred at that location did not have a monument; in the coming months and years, additional Jews, gypsies, communists And the Soviet prisoners, they were slaughtered even in Babihar. Yevtushenko used his poem to remember Jewish victims for centuries, but his theme is that people who died in Babi Yar should not be forgotten. The monument helps to celebrate Jews and other death victims, but they may be destroyed or destroyed. In contrast, Yevtushenko's poem will be a more prolonged memorial to the dead.
About the poetry of Babiyar commemorating the massacre of Nazi Ain Satsu Gruppe during the Second World War, about the valley of Kiev in the capital of Ukraine. In one of the atrocities that occurred between 29th and 30th September 1941, 31,771 Jewish men, women and children were murdered during the Ein Satz Gruppe operations. On 22 June 1941, Nazi ยท Germany attacked the Soviet Union with Barbarossa. On September 19, 1941, the German army quickly crossed the 1939 Bossu border and arrived in Kiev on September 19, 1941. Ten days later, following the explosion at the headquarters of the German army, the Jews were rounded up, marched out of the city, exiled. And slaughtering; they are stacked on top of each other in Babi Yar (literally meaning "grandmother's valley").