Education
Later, they moved to Olenevski Quarry (now Dokuchaevsk), where Dziuba finished secondary school № 1. He graduated from Donetsk Pedagogical Institute, and pursued postgraduate studies in the Shevchenko Institute of Literature.
Later, they moved to Olenevski Quarry (now Dokuchaevsk), where Dziuba finished secondary school № 1. He graduated from Donetsk Pedagogical Institute, and pursued postgraduate studies in the Shevchenko Institute of Literature.
Company-Chief of Editorial Board of the Encyclopaedia of Modern Ukraine. Born into a peasant family. In 1932, Ivan"s family, fleeing from the famine, moved from their home village to the nearby workers" village Novotroyits"ke for a short time.
His work was first published in 1959.
In the 1970s, he was subjected to harassment for the views he expressed in some publications. (London, 1968, and "Motherland" magazine (ukr "Вітчизна"), 1990, Number.
A special commission of the Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine called the work "lampoons on the Soviet reality, the national policy of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the practice of communist construction in the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics." Authorities accused Dziuba of undermining Soviet friendship of peoples, and fueling hatred between the Ukrainian and Russian peoples. With help from Oleg Antonov, Dziuba was pardoned and hired to work at the Antonov Serial Production Plant.
Laureate of the Shevchenko Prize, O. Biletsky Prize, Antonovich Fund International Prize, Volodymyr Vernadsky Prize.
Foreign his work Internationalism or Russification? 5-7), dealing with the problems threatening national relations in socialist society, he was sentenced to 5 years in prison and 5 years in exile.
National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine]
Chief editor of the magazine The Contemporary (Сучасність) in the 1990s, a member of the editorial boards of scientific magazines "Київська старовина", "Слово і час", "Євроатлантика" and others