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  1. Ales Adamovich - Wikipedia. Aleksandr Mikhailovich Adamovich (Belarusian: Аляксандр Міхайлавіч Адамовіч, romanized: Aliaksandr Michailavič Adamovič, Russian: Алекса́ндр Миха́йлович Адамо́вич; 3 September 1927 – 26 January 1994) was a Soviet Belarusian writer, screenwriter, literary critic and democratic activist.

  2. Jun 30, 2020 · “The face of a man who survived—who tore himself by a miracle out of fire!” writes the Belarusian Adamovich (1927–94)—a former partisan in a country where every fourth person was killed during the German occupation of 1941 to 1944—in describing his encounter with this silent man, in autobiographical prose that he published later.

  3. Jan 29, 1994 · BETWEEN 1987 and 1989 the Belarussian writer Ales Adamovich was in the news in the Russian media nearly every day, and became a celebrity and a public figure. It was he who broke silence on the...

  4. Jan 1, 1994 · Alieś Adamovič (Ales Adamovich) (1927-1994) was a Belarusian author, literary critic, and screenwriter. During World War Two he fought as a partisan, an experience which inspired his influential novel Chatyn.

  5. Jan 1, 2001 · 4.50. 36 ratings4 reviews. Ales Adamovich, Yanka Bryl and Vladimir Kolesnik are popular Soviet Belorussian authors of books, studies, and articles. For 4 years they searched Belorussian for survivors of Nazi punitive expeditions and found more than three hundred.

  6. Ales Adamovich was born on 3 September 1927 in the USSR. He was a writer, known for Come and See (1985), Franz + Polina (2006) and Voyna pod kryshami (1971). He died on 1 January 1994 in Moscow, Russia.

  7. Alieś Adamovič. 19 books34 followers. Alieś Adamovič (Ales Adamovich) (1927-1994) was a Belarusian author, literary critic, and screenwriter. During World War Two he fought as a partisan, an experience which inspired his influential novel Chatyn.

  8. Jun 30, 2020 · 'The face of a man who survived—who tore himself by a miracle out of fire!' writes the Belarusian Adamovich (1927–94)—a former partisan in a country where every fourth person was killed during the German occupation of 1941 to 1944—in describing his encounter with this silent man, in autobiographical prose that he published later.

  9. Ales Adamovich was a Belarusian Soviet writer and a critic, Professor and Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Doctor of Philosophy in philology, Doctorate in 1962; member of the Supreme Soviet.

  10. Aleksandr Mikhailovich Adamovich (Belarusian: Аляксандр Міхайлавіч Адамовіч, romanized: Aliaksandr Michailavič Adamovič, Russian: Алекса́ндр Миха́йлович Адамо́вич; 3 September 1927 – 26 January 1994) was a Soviet Belarusian writer, screenwriter, literary critic and democratic activist.