Л°±н•™ - Лі Мќґмљ¤ Мќґлњђлі” Zhuravli (cranes) May 2026

: The narrator watches a flock of cranes and senses their voices are those of the fallen.

: A sense of silence and sorrow falls over the living as they look at the sky. : The narrator watches a flock of cranes

The song was composed in 1968 by Yan Frenkel , set to a poem by the Dagestani poet Rasul Gamzatov . Gamzatov was inspired after visiting the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, where he learned of Sadako Sasaki, a girl who tried to fold 1,000 paper cranes to survive leukemia caused by the atomic bomb. He merged this image with his own grief for his brothers and friends lost during World War II. Gamzatov was inspired after visiting the Hiroshima Peace

: The song was famously first recorded by Mark Bernes , who was terminally ill with cancer at the time; he died only one week after the recording. : His performance bridges the gap between the

: His performance bridges the gap between the Soviet history of the Great Patriotic War and the Korean collective memory of conflict and separation. Thematic Analysis of Lyrics

The lyrics, translated into many languages, follow a structure of observation, realization, and eventual transition: