Poetry blooms eternal

ChrisD(RJ) chrisd at russiajournal.com
Thu Jul 18 04:24:04 PDT 2002


BBC 11 July 2002 Russians to clone legendary tree By Steve Rosenberg BBC correspondent in Moscow

Scientists in southern Russia have started work on an unusual project to clone one of the country's most famous trees.

The old oak of Taganrog is thought to have inspired the 19th Century Russian

poet Aleksandr Pushkin to write verse.

But last month the tree burned down and it was feared a famous piece of Russian history could have been lost forever.

Legend has it that this was the tree which inspired Pushkin to write one of his best loved poems - all about an oak with a golden chain.

Not that the old oak of Taganrog is really an oak - it is a mulberry tree.

But then, as the people of Taganrog will tell you, Pushkin wasn't exactly an

expert when it came to biology.

Cultural heritage

Now there could be life in the ancient tree yet after a group of local businessman vowed to raise it from the ashes, using the very latest technology.

A team of scientists from the city of Rostov-on-Don has been brought in - their mission: to clone the tree using living tissue recovered from the stump.

Leonid Matusevich, head of the Taganrog Union of Businessmen, told the BBC there was no question of profiting from the project - local businesses simply felt a duty to protect their country's rich past.

The tree's reappearance, he said, would herald a spiritual revival across the whole of Russia.



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