The Pen and the Sword: Israel, Writing, Politics: Jewish Quarterly 250
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About this ebook
Successive generations of Israeli writers have charted the hopes of peace and the pain of conflict. What does the nation's writing reveal about the challenges of today?
“The process of saying goodbye to these two authors, who had been a visible presence in Israeli society for decades, is far from over.” —Nir Baram
The Pen and the Sword explores the efforts by successive generations of Israeli writers to grapple with their nation's difficult political questions. In a probing essay, Israeli novelist Nir Baram examines the remarkable friendship between two giants of Israeli literature – Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua – whose lives, writing and passionate disputes reflect their country's recent turbulent history and divides. And leading critic Arik Glasner surveys a younger generation of Israeli writers, whose disparate voices and stories provide a crucial glimpse into Israel today.
The issue also includes Steven Nadler's new insights into the excommunication of Spinoza, Michael Vatikiotis's portrait of the Jewish community of pluralist Singapore and book reviews by Irris Makler, Benjamin Balint and Catherine Taylor.
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The Pen and the Sword - Jonathan Pearlman
The Jewish Quarterly is published four times a year
by The Jewish Quarterly Pty Ltd
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eISBN 9781743822739 E-ISSN 23262516
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Issue 250, November 2022
THE JEWISH QUARTERLY
Contributors
Nir Baram (translated by Jessica Cohen)
Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua: A tale of political twins
Arik Glasner (translated by Jessica Cohen)
After the prophets: The next generation of Israeli writers
History
Steven Nadler The curse on Spinoza
Community
Michael Vatikiotis A community to celebrate: The Jews of Singapore
Reviews
Irris Makler Inside the Old City of Jerusalem
Benjamin Balint Jacob’s ladder
Catherine Taylor The unforgettable worlds of Natalia Ginzburg
Contributors
Benjamin Balint is the author of Kafka’s Last Trial. His next book, Bruno Schulz: An Artist, a Murder, and the Hijacking of History, will be published in April.
Nir Baram is an award-winning Israeli author and journalist. His latest novel is World Shadow.
Jessica Cohen has translated leading Israeli writers. Her translation of David Grossman’s A Horse Walks Into a Bar won the Man Booker International Prize in 2017, and she is a Guggenheim Fellow.
Arik Glasner has published two novels, And at This Season and Why I Do Not Write, and a book of literary criticism, Free Critic. He has a PhD in Hebrew literature and writes weekly books reviews for Yedioth Ahronoth.
Irris Makler is a reporter and author based in Jerusalem. Her books include Hope Street, Jerusalem and Our Woman in Kabul.
Steven Nadler is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His books include Spinoza: A Life and Think Least of Death: Spinoza on How to Live and How to Die.
Catherine Taylor is a writer, editor and critic, and the former deputy director of English PEN. Her memoir, The Stirrings, will be published in 2023.
Michael Vatikiotis has lived in South-East Asia for three decades, writing about politics and society. His latest book is Lives Between the Lines: A Journey in Search of the Lost Levant.
Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua
A tale of political twins
Nir Baram
(translated by Jessica Cohen)
Come over again, we’ll talk. There are decisive questions on the table: what sort of state are we going to have here?
said A.B. Yehoshua, at eighty-five, when we said goodbye at his apartment door exactly a month before his death.
I looked at him: he was gaunt and had trouble standing up, yet the familiar smile of curiosity and amusement was still on his face. It’s impossible to understand what goes through the mind of someone approaching death, or to see the world as they see it. And in that moment, I understood even less. Why were these decisive questions
preoccupying Yehoshua even as he acknowledged his impending death, talking of it openly and sometimes humorously? After all, we’d been debating these issues for seventeen years, and had never made the headway we’d hoped for. From where, even now, did he draw the strength, the curiosity, the concern for the future of this place? I know how to fill life with hope,
he once told me. Perhaps that was part of it.
Which decisive questions
was Yehoshua referring to? Above all, there was one: the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and his new approach to solving it, on which he was very focused in his last years. Whenever we met, he expressed anger at my generation for not being sufficiently involved in political issues, for not making our voices heard. If you take responsibility,
he said, you’ll be more meaningful writers. You may not reach our status, which is unique and was created in the aftermath of the ’67 war, but you will be meaningful.
And he was absolutely right: Yehoshua and his literary peers had achieved an exceptional standing.
One topic that we only discussed openly at our last meeting was Yehoshua’s relationship with Amos Oz, who had died in 2018. When I was a boy, in the 1980s, they were already considered the two most important Israeli writers.
I had other friends,
Yehoshua said, but my friendship with Amos was the most significant. We used to show each other our manuscripts, and comment on them. That shows trust. I loved him, his sharpness and his integrity.
I asked if there was any competition between them.
There was envy. Undoubtedly. I overcame the envy. I did not let it hurt our friendship. He gained more esteem and fame than I did, especially outside Israel. There aren’t many writers I envied: all my envious energies were diverted to him. But I did not allow my envy to sabotage our friendship. And he envied me, too, because I was a more frequent object of literary research. I don’t know if there’s any such thing in your generation: a twin to deal with.
We don’t have that twin thing,
I replied.
That’s not good – you must always have a twin: someone who annoys you but whom you love. Someone who pulls you ahead, and you him. And there’s something else: the issue of responsibility. We felt responsible for Israel’s political and moral image.
Yehoshua often spoke of responsibility and the author’s role. To him, an author is not just a storyteller but a person with a moral role in society. Political involvement is practically an obligation, not a choice. Amos Oz and A.B. Yehoshua’s standing in Israeli society was puzzling to many writers I met around the world, who saw themselves as storytellers, not moral voices. In fact, it was only after my own books were published in other languages and I met authors from different countries that I understood how uniquely Israeli was Yehoshua’s and Oz’s status. Of course there are politically active authors in other countries, but there are very few who can compete with the clout that both Oz and Yehoshua wielded.
Yehoshua correlates the status awarded to him and Oz in Israel (and beyond) to the Six-Day War of 1967
These two authors did not create a new slot. The politically vocal author’s position in Israel goes back to the circumstances of the state’s founding, and to the importance attributed to intellectuals by political leaders – among them Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion – in a burgeoning society that needed both great stories and moral justifications. Most leaders of Mapai (the party that dominated Israel’s political system in its first three decades and was the progenitor of the Labor Party) came from Eastern European cultures that gave considerable weight to writers’ political stances.
Political writers such as Yosef Haim Brenner were active in pre-state Israel, and the generation that preceded Yehoshua and Oz – known as the 1948 Generation
– included several writers who were extremely political. The most prominent among them