KARABAKH PROBLEM IN MODERN POETRY
Keywords:
fiction, poetic scope, Karabakh theme, homeland, return to Shusha, hymn of natureAbstract
During the Soviet era, examples of poetry and various works of art were written about Shusha. People's poet Rasul Rza's "Shusha" (1947), "Shusham is mine" (1980), Nabi Khazri's "Ways of Shusha" (1954), Mirvarid Dilbazi's "Shusha", Arif Abdullazade's "In Shusha" poems talk about Shusha, a beautiful, charming corner of Azerbaijan It is said that in this mysterious land, where nature is a hundred colors, it is possible that man will neither grow old nor die.
After the occupation, the sadness of the poetic word began to beat in the pulse of our poetry. The pen owners wrote several stories, poems, novels and poems with a longing for the homeland. Moaning in the footsteps of the enemy, they called their sons to revenge in order to vote for their call on the difficult day of the Motherland. Poems of our national poet Mammad Araz, such as "The Motherland calls us", "Soldier's son", "Stand up, Azerbaijan"; Zalimkhan Yagub's poem "I do not condemn you", poem "Shusha fell asleep tonight"; Anwar Ahmad's "Where are you running, poor son!", "My shroud is covered with blood", "My great God", "Don't read, Arif"; Shusha poet Eyyub Shirlanli's "I have entrusted Shusha to God", "Ramiz is still guarding Shusha", "Longing for the homeland", "I died and stayed in Karabakh, God", "Shusha", "Ay Shusham"; Dozens of poems by Karim Karimli "Hello, Shusha!", "I condemn you, people of Shusha" and Alamdar Guluzadeh about the fate of the painful homeland expelled from their homeland is valuable as a generalized poetic example of his views.