Yelena Khanga

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yelena Khanga (aka Elena Khanga) was born (1962) and raised in Moscow, Russia, USSR, and came to the United States in 1990 to write (with Susan Jacoby) Soul to Soul: The Story of a Black Russian American Family: 1865 - 1992 ([1]). Khanga divides her time between New York City and Moscow.

The daughter of Abdulla (onetime vice president of Zanzibar) and Lily (a historian and educator; maiden name, Golden) Khanga (pronounced Han ga), she is of African, Russian and Polish Jewish descent, the great-granddaughter of a former Mississippi slave and a Polish rabbi. Her American maternal grandmother, of Polish Jewish descent, was a Russian-English translator for a Soviet news agency.

Yelena Khanga was the moderator of the Russian television talk show The Domino Effect ([2]). One of her interviewees was Paul Klebnikov, Russian-based editor of Fortune who was later murdered under mysterious circumstances.

She was also a performer with a comedy group in Brighton Beach called Kanotye.

[edit] Quotes

My grandmother often said, "Learn to write, Yelena, because it is a piece of bread." In the Russia of my youth, it was a prestigious thing to be a writer. Even if you had no money, people still felt your life was graced by art.

[edit] Links

In other languages