Julius Telesin
Julius Zinovyevich Telesin is a Russian-Israeli mathematician, human rights activist, chess player, poet, and translator. He was a notable participant in the Soviet samizdat culture of the 1960s. He emigrated to Israel where he lived since 1970. He taught mathematics at the University of Beersheba.
Telesin was born on April 1, 1933 in Moscow. He is the son of Jewish Yiddish-language poet Zyama Telesin. His mother was the poet Rakhil Boymvol.
1001 anekdot
Telesin compiled a collection of 1001 Soviet political jokes published in 1986 in Tenafly, New Jersey. Bruce Friend Adams, who cites it in his study of Soviet and Russian history through jokes, praised it as the most clever and funny presentation of such material:The book includes jokes involving Stalin, Rabinovich, Khrushchev, Chapayev, Petka, Trotsky, Kosygin, Mao, Brezhnev, Gierek, Lenin, Dzerzhinsky, Radio Yerevan, Carter, Vovochka, Molotov, Furtseva, Chernenko and many others.
Example :
''Why did Lenin wear shoes, and Stalin boots? – Because under Lenin, the filth in Russia only reached the ankles.''
Selected publications
1001 izbrannyj sovetskij političeskij anekdot. Tenafly, NJ: Hermitage Press, 1986.Samizdat in Brief: An Introductory Article. 1973.- Foreword to Peter Reddaway, Uncensored Russia: Protest and Dissent in the Soviet Union; the Unofficial Moscow Journal, a Chronicle of Current Events. New York: American Heritage Press, 1972.Detstvo v tyurʹme: memuary Petra Yakira. London: Macmillan, 1972.Teoriya kombinatsiy. Jerusalem: Ivan Marton, 1992.Shutkovanie nad bezdnoy. Jerusalem: J. Telesin, 2009.Stishki o suverennoi demokratii. Jerusalem: J. Telesin, 2008.