Yuri Kolker was born in
Leningrad in 1946, to a Russian mother and a Jewish father. Since childhood, he attended various officially authorised literary associations. In 1969, he graduated with honours from the
Leningrad Polytechnic Institute and got his PhD in Physics and Mathematics in 1978. From the 1960s, he became part of the Russian
Samizdat culture. By 1975, in addition to pure lyrics, civic motifs appeared in his poetry, and thereby he joined the Movement of the
Soviet Dissidents. Following the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, Yuri Kolker quit his work in a state science research institution, cut off his few remaining ties with the Soviet officialdom and became a labourer. He lived in a communal slum, in severe poverty, making a living as a boiler-room operator. By early 1983, while being hounded the
KGB, he completed for
Samizdat the first ever annotated collection of poems by the then forbidden in the USSR poet
Vladislav Khodasevich in two volumes. The collection was immediately re-published in Paris by
La presse libre, the publishing house of the newspaper
La pensée russe. In June 1984, after years as a
refusenik struggling for an exit visa, he emigrated to Israel. In October 1989, he joined the London
BBC Russian Service where he went on to edit the radio magazines
Paradigma (1990–1999) and
Yevropa (1999–2002). == Family ==