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Mikhail Dadashev
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Mikhail Borisovich Dadashev (Russian: Михаил Борисович Дадашев; Hebrew: מיכאיל דדשב; 1936) is a Soviet, Russian, and Dagestani writer. In 2016,[1] by decree of the Head of Dagestan, Mikhail Dadashev was awarded the honorary title of "People's Writer of the Republic of Dagestan". He is a member of the Union of Writers of Russia. Dadashev is also a laureate of the Derzhavin Prize.[1][2] In 2014, the Moscow City Organization of the Union of Russian Writers awarded him a diploma named after M. Yu. Lermontov, “No wonder all of Russia remembers,” with the presentation of the medal “M. Yu. Lermontov. 1814-1841.”[2]
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Biography
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Mikhail Dadashev was born in the city of Derbent, in the Dagestan ASSR,[3] into a Mountain Jewish family.[2]
During his school years, Mikhail Dadashev wrote his first works of fiction in Russian. While serving in the navy, he contributed to newspapers in Leningrad.[2]
After graduating from the economics department of Moscow State University,[4] Mikhail Dadashev worked in Derbent as head of the agriculture and industry section in the editorial offices of the newspapers For Communist Labor (Russian: За коммунистический труд) in Izberbash and Banner of Communism (Russian: Знамя коммунизма) in Derbent.[1][2][3][4] He later served as the first secretary of the Derbent District Committee of the Komsomol.[2] For 20 years, he headed the district financial department and subsequently worked in the tax service.[2]
From 2002 until his retirement, he worked in Moscow at the central office of the Federal Taxation Service of the Russian Federation.[1][3]
Mikhail Dadashev was awarded honorary certificates from the Ministry of Finance of the USSR, the Russian Federation, and the Republic of Dagestan.
He has been a member of the Union of Soviet Writers since 1980.[2][4]
He is the author of several books, including:[1][2][3][4]
- 2020, collected works in 5 volumes. The collected works include novels Brothers, Frosts, The Lying Tree, Poppy Trail, the stories In the Captivity of Apata, Fate, short stories and parables.[5]
- 2013, And Sometimes the Heart Hurts from Laughter, parables. In 2015, Mikhail Dadashev was awarded the Derzhavin Prize for his book of parables.[2]
- 2011, Frosts, novel
- 2008, In the Captivity of Apata, story
- 2008, The Lying Tree, novel
- 2006, Russian–Tat (Judeo-Tat) Dictionary[6]
- 2002, The Poppy Trail, a historical novel about the destruction of the Jewish village of Aba-Sava — the capital of a small, semi-independent Mountain Jewish "principality" in Dagestan that existed from the 1630s until around 1800.
- 2000, Polonaise of Love, stories and plays[6]
- 2000, Fate, selected editions
- 1995, Vanity of Vanities, parables.
Mikhail Dadashev wrote the autobiographical novel Roots, as well as the stories in the Judeo-Tat language:[2]
- 1983, Fate (Judeo-Tat: Гьисмет), story
- 1980, Brothers (Judeo-Tat: Бироргьо), novel
- 1977, Confession (Judeo-Tat: Тубономе), collection of satirical stories
- 1972, Noble Man (Judeo-Tat: Хьэлоле мерд), collection of humorous stories
- The dry well (Judeo-Tat: Хуьшг бире чол)
- Water Tap (Judeo-Tat: Билогъ)
- False tradition (Judeo-Tat: Дургуне гIэдот), a play.
- Man and Boy (Judeo-Tat: Мерд не куклэ)
In 2018, he was awarded the Medal for Services to Derbent.[3]
After many years of work in the Derbent region, Mikhail Dadashev moved to Moscow.[2]
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Awards and Titles
- Medal for Services to Derbent (2018)
- People's Writer of the Republic of Dagestan (2016)
- Laureate of the Derzhavin Prize (2015)
- Diploma named after M. Yu. Lermontov "No wonder all of Russia remembers" with the presentation of the medal "M.Yu. Lermontov.1814-1841." (2014)
- International Literary Prize named after N. A. Nekrasov
References
External links
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