Western Governments Should Stop Dithering and Give Their Wholehearted Support to Iranian Protesters
Don’t repeat the mistakes of 2009.
January 5, 2018
A survivor, he chronicled not just the Holocaust but also anti-Semitism and its spiritual effects.
Aharon Appelfeld—the author of 47 books, including numerous novels—died yesterday at the age of eighty-five. Born in the Romanian city of Czernowitz (now Chernivtsi, Ukraine), Appelfeld survived World War II as a child in hiding—an experience that informed much of his fiction. He came to Israel in 1946, where he first began to learn Hebrew, the only language in which he would write; his final novel was published in September. Unlike Israel’s other literary giants, Appelfeld steered clear of politics in both his writings and his public pronouncements. In 1983, Ruth Wisse appraised his work up to that point:
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Login or SubscribeDon’t repeat the mistakes of 2009.
Israel needs a policy regarding the cybercurrency.
It won’t impinge on religious freedom—or encourage Shabbat observance.
A survivor, he chronicled not just the Holocaust but also anti-Semitism and its spiritual effects.
And the 17th-century Spanish book that influenced it.