Vera Rich Explained

Vera Rich
Birth Name:Faith Elizabeth Rich
Birth Date:1936 4, df=yes
Birth Place:London, County of London
Death Place:London, Greater London
Occupation:poet, historian, translator, journalist, contributor to Nature, The Lancet, Index on Censorship, Physics World
Citizenship:United Kingdom
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Vera Rich (born Faith Elizabeth Rich, 24 April 1936 – 20 December 2009[1]) was a British poet, journalist, historian, and translator from Belarusian and Ukrainian.

Biography

Born in London in April 1936, she studied at St Hilda's College of the University of Oxford and Bedford College, London. In 1959, her poetry attracted the attention of the editors of John O'London's Weekly and the following year her first collection of verse, Outlines, was privately produced and received favourable reviews, selling out within six months.[2]

Her translations of the works of Taras Shevchenko, commissioned for the century of his death (1961), received favourable reviews, both in the West and in the Soviet Ukraine. For this work, Rich was awarded an Honorary Diploma in Shevchenko Studies by the Ukrainian Free Academy of Sciences.

Later, influenced by Fr Ceslaus Sipovich, she started also translating Belarusian poetry. Her first translation from Belarusian was the poem "Na čužynie" by Janka Kupala. Her novel Like Water, Like Fire, published in 1971, became the world's first anthology of translations of Belarusian poetry into a western European language. Later she published The Images Swarm Free, a collection of translations of verses by prominent Belarusian authors, including Alés Harun, Maksim Bahdanovič and Źmitrok Biadula. Rich inspired a number of other British people such as Alan Flowers to become involved in promotion of Belarusian culture.[3]

Rich was the founder of Manifold, "the magazine of new poetry". It was started in 1962 and appeared regularly under her editorship until May 1969, when it was suspended owing to her taking a job as Soviet and East European Correspondent for the scientific weekly Nature. At the time of its suspension Manifold had close on 900 subscribers, almost half of them in the USA. This initially temporary job at Nature lasted for more than 20 years. It was only in 1998 that it proved possible to relaunch Manifold. All together, 49 issues were published under Rich's editorship. It published original poetry in traditional and innovative styles, in various variants of English, and – from time to time – in major European languages, as well as translations of poetry from less-known languages.

Vera Rich died in London in December 2009. Her ashes were buried in Ukraine and in the Church of St Cyril of Turau and All the Patron Saints of the Belarusian People in London.

Bibliography

Books
Articles

External links

Notes

  1. Vidal-Hall, Judith. Obituary: Vera Rich. Index on Censorship. 8 January 2010.
  2. Rich, Vera. "Portents and Images". London, 1963 [blurb].
  3. Web site: People Anglo-Belarusian Society. 26 October 2013 . 2021-05-25. en-US.