Mazunov Munir Khasanovich ( Tat. Manir Khusn uly Mazunov ), ( April 1, 1918 , Old Karlygan - March 31, 1987 , Kazan ) - Tatar poet [1] , translator [1] , journalist.
| Munir Mazunov | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Birth name | Munir Khasanovich Mazunov | ||||||||||||
| Date of Birth | April 1, 1918 | ||||||||||||
| Place of Birth | Stary Karlygan village, Petrovsky district , Saratov province , Soviet Russia | ||||||||||||
| Date of death | March 31, 1987 (68 years old) | ||||||||||||
| Place of death | Kazan , USSR | ||||||||||||
| Citizenship | |||||||||||||
| Occupation | poet , translator , journalist , editor | ||||||||||||
| Language of Works | Tatar | ||||||||||||
| Awards | |||||||||||||
Content
Biography
Born on April 1, 1918 in the village of Old Karlygan [1] , Petrovsky district, Saratov province, now Lopatinsky district , Penza region .
In 1935-1938 he studied at the Astrakhan Pedagogical College. Upon completion, he worked as a teacher of the Tatar language and literature in Izhevsk .
In 1939-1946 he served in the ranks of the Soviet Army [1] . As a correspondent-organizer of the front-line newspaper Trevoga, he took part in battles against the Japanese imperialists.
From 1946 to 1949 he worked as an editor of the Tatar Radio Committee and at the same time studied at the Kazan Pedagogical Institute.
In 1949 he was again mobilized into the ranks of the Soviet army.
Until 1953, he was part of the Soviet troops in Poland , where he worked as a senior literary employee of the editorial office of the newspaper Volnost, which was published in Polish.
From 1953 to 1959 he worked as an editor and then deputy chairman of the Tatar Radio Committee.
From 1960 to 1963 he worked as a senior editor of the Tatar book publishing house.
From 1967 to 1970, he was the editor of the Tatpotrebsoyuz newspaper “Tatarstan Cooperator” (“Tatarstan Cooperators”), Kazan .
He worked as an editor-translator in the press department of the Council of Ministers of the TASSR.
Member of the Union of Journalists of the USSR , member of the Writers Union of the TASSR.
Creativity
M. Mazunov began to write during the years of World War II. Poems, essays and short stories of that period were published on the pages of front-line newspapers and on the pages of periodicals, in almanacs and literary collections. He translated the works of M. Yu. Lermontov and N. A. Nekrasov , S. Marshak , P. Neruda , N. Hikmet , P. Khuzangai and others into the Tatar language [2] .
The author of many collections [2] among which:
- The Twelve Months of 1948
- Our Voice 1951
- "Song of Youth" 1954
- "Heart sings" 1958
- "Son of the Urals" 1962
- Little Builders 1967
- “He Has Not Returned” 1968
- White Doves 1973
- "Homeland" 1975
- “From the heart” 1980
- "Horizons" [3] 1988 and others.
Munir Mazunov actively collaborated with many composers of the republic, such as: S. Saydashev , A. Klyucharyov , M. Muzafarov , B. Muliukov , A. Monasypov, E. Bakirov , R. Yakhin , S. Sadykova and others. Among the popular songs M. Mazunova “Warm hugs of my mother”, “My dear”, “Native land”, “Teacher”, “Halima”, “Youth”, “Lullaby”, “Kazan Lights” and many others.
Memory
On May 19, 2018, a memorial plaque was installed on the wall of a secondary school in the village of Stary Karlygan of the Lopatinsky district, M. Mazunov [4] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Savin O.M. Mazunov Munir Khasanovich // Penza Encyclopedia. - M .: Scientific publishing house "Big Russian Encyclopedia", 2001. - S. 315
- ↑ 1 2 Tatar Encyclopedic Dictionary. - Kazan: Institute of the Tatar Encyclopedia of the Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Tatarstan, 1998 - S. 334.
- ↑ Munir Chasanovič Mazunov. Gorizonty
- ↑ The site of the administration of the Lopatinsky district of the Penza region.
Sources
- Tatar Encyclopedic Dictionary. - Kazan: Institute of the Tatar Encyclopedia of the Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Tatarstan, 1998 - S. 334.
- Savin O.M. Mazunov Munir Khasanovich // Penza Encyclopedia. - M .: Scientific publishing house "Big Russian Encyclopedia", 2001. - S. 315.