Archive for the ‘Literature’ Category

Holocaust remembrance day

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

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Today is Israel’s official Holocaust Remembrance Day, commemorating the 6 million Jews murdered in the holocaust. This day as always been a hard one for me, all four of my grandparents are holocaust survivors and I always felt it is essential for me to remember and learn what happened there, to keep my family history alive. Since moving to NYC life has taken a different pace and sometimes just dealing with day to day issues turns me off track and makes me forgetful… So I would like to recommend a book: MAUS: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman. MAUS (winner of the 1992 Pulitzer prize) MAUS is a graphic novel telling the story of the author’s father’s survival of the Holocaust.  It is also the tale of Spiegelman’s strained relationship with his father, and his attempt to come to terms with his dad, himself, and the truths of the Holocaust. In the books mice are Jews, pigs are Poles, and cats are Nazi’s.  It takes the older Spiegelman from rich factory owner, to a Jewish ghetto, to Auschwitz, and home.  With my love to animation, I found that pictures were able to bring to life in an always relevant way the life in war and felt reconnected to my family’s history, especially my grandmother an Auschwitz survivor. I recommend this book to everyone; it is difficult to digest at times but is able to hit the spot and would make a great read for a day like today. mause-2.jpg

David Grossman

Saturday, April 12th, 2008

My favorite Israeli author is David Grossman. His book “Zig Zag Children” was quoted by my siblings and me for most of our teenaage years.  Grossman’s latest novel, “Isha Borahat Mibesora” which translates as “A Woman Running from News” (English title: “Until the end of the land”), was released yesterday in Israel and has already gotten amazing reviews.

 

The novel is about Ora, a woman who takes off from home when her soldier son leaves to take part in a major military operation. She runs away from her home in order not to torture herself sitting and waiting for bad news to arrive. She travels to the Galilee and contacts Avram, her childhood sweetheart, and wanders on foot with him across Israel. In order to protect her son and give him strength, she talks about him throughout the entire journey and relives the story of his life.

 

I am fascinated by this book for two reasons. Firstly, Grossman, like most Israeli authors, has tended to shy away from the Arab-Israeli conflict as the focus of his fiction. While he doesn’t ignore “the situation,” it is usually in the background, while the primary subjects are his characters as individuals. In this book, the conflict itself creates the story. 

Secondly, the heartbreaking reality of the conflict on the author’s own life when his youngest son is killed in Lebanon as he himself is close to completing his book, is very moving, and quite tragic. Grossman’s own life and his fiction have become intertwined.

 

Ahead of his latest book’s release, Grossman decided not to give media interviews.

Instead he released this e-mail to the media:

“I started writing this book in May 2003, six months before the end of my oldest son Yonatan’s military service and six months before his younger brother, Uri, was drafted. Both of them served in the Armored Corps. Uri was very familiar with the plot of the book and the characters. Every time we spoke on the phone and especially when he was on leave, he would ask what was new with the story and in the lives of its heroes (’What did you do to them this week?’ was his usual question). He spent most of his military service in the occupied territories, on patrols and in observation posts, ambushes and at checkpoints, and occasionally would share with me his experiences. I had a feeling, or more accurately, a wish that the book I was writing would protect him. On August 12, 2006, during the last hours of the Second Lebanon War, Uri was killed in South Lebanon. His tank was hit by a missile during an operation to rescue a damaged tank. Also killed with Uri was the entire crew of the tank: Benaya Rein, Adam Goren and Alexander Bonimovitch. After the end of the shiva, I went back to the book. Most of it was already written. What changed, more than anything else, was the resonance of the reality in which the final version was written.”

The book has not come out in English yet, but I’m sure it will in the near future (most of his other books have been translated). But I will make sure to write my opinion when I finish the book.

 

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