Nobel Prize-winning author Olga Tokarczuk says Russia threat to 'free world'

The Polish author spoke at the Jerusalem International Writers Festival.

AP
Olga Tokarczuk is known for her humanist themes and playful, subversive streak.
JERUSALEM - A Polish Nobel Prize-winning author on Sunday called Russia a threat to the "free world," saying its attack on neighbouring Ukraine had echoes of the Second World War.

Olga Tokarczuk, known for her humanist themes and playful, subversive streak, spoke at the Jerusalem International Writers Festival.

"The Poles share the Ukrainian feeling of danger that Russia presents to the free world," Tokarczuk said, adding that the Polish government had warned about the risk presented by Russian aggression for years.


Poland, Ukraine's western neighbour, has taken in over three million Ukrainian refugees since Russia launched its invasion in late February. Warsaw has called for tough international sanctions against Russia.

"Nobody could imagine that this war would be so cruel so anachronistic and this war brings to mind the horrible images of World War Two," she said.

Tokarczuk was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2018 for her 18th-century epic "The Books of Jacob," about a Jewish mystic and sect leader named Jacob Frank.
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