When the Red Army began to push the Wehrmacht out of Soviet territory in the summer of 1943, the renowned Soviet-Jewish journalists Ilya
Ehrenburg (II 'ia Erenburg) and Vasilii Grossman organized two dozen Jewish and non-Jewish writers and journalists to follow Soviet troops into formerly occupied towns and cities in order to interview survivors and gather documents.
The shadow of Ilya
Ehrenburg (1891-1967), a senior contemporary, hovered over Ginzburg's career.
[41.] Schoo DP, Tan GX,
Ehrenburg MR, Pross SE, Ward BK, Carey JP.
Ehrenburg "People, Years, Life", puts purely documentary and artistic and documentary works in a single line.
As the story goes, while dining there one evening Breton spied the Russian writer Ilya
Ehrenburg, who had criticized him in print the year before.
(6.) The same attitude is seen in his answer to the letter asking the approval of the "unconditional prohibition of the atomic weapon" from Iliya
Ehrenburg, a Russian writer, in May 1950.
This helps illustrate the point made in this article's opening quote by the Soviet-era author Ilya
Ehrenburg: oppression carries with it a basic instability.