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Moshe Shamir

 

1921 -

Israeli writer and political activist.

Moshe Shamir was born in Mandatory Palestine, in Safed, and raised in Tel Aviv. From 1941 to 1947 he was a member of Kibbutz Mishmar ha-Emek. In 1944 he joined the Palmah, and he fought in the Arab-Israel War (1948). Shamir is a leader of the first generation of native Israeli writers and best known for his novels of the 1940s and 1950s, which depict in rich detail and glowing terms the development of the new state and the sabra character. Hu Halakh Ba-Sadot (1947; He Walked through the Fields [1959]), Ad Elat (1950; Until Elat), and Kilometer 56 (1949) were all written in this vein. This adulatory attitude toward Israeli society metamorphosed into a critical one in the novels ha-Gevul (1966; The border) and Yonah Be-Hazer Zarah (1975; Pigeon in a strange yard). Shamir's early embrace of Marxism influenced the underlying themes of class conflict in many of his historical novels, such as Melekh Basar Va-Dam (1954; The King of Flesh and Blood [1958]) and Kivsat ha-Rash (1956; David's Stranger [1964]).

Following the 1967 Arab - Israel War, Shamir helped found the Greater Land of Israel movement, advocating the retention of all captured land west of the Jordan River. In 1973 he joined the Likud Party under Menachem Begin but then switched to the right-wing Tehiyah Party to protest the conclusion of a peace treaty with Egypt. He served as a member of the ninth Knesset (Israel's parliament) from 1977 to 1981.

While continuing to publish novels (Playboys [1986], To the End [1991], and Yaʿir Avraham Shtern [2000]), Shamir in recent years has also written critiques of Israeli literature (Personal View [1987], The Seed Carriers [1989], For and Against [1989], and Filling the Gap [1999]), of Israeli politics (The Red Thread [1987]), studies of Jewish identity (Searchlight to the Depth [1996]) and one book calling for a Zionist renaissance (The Green Place [1991]).

Bibliography

Almog, Oz. The Sabra: The Creation of the New Jew, translated by Haim Watzman. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.

Shaked, Gershon. Modern Hebrew Fiction, translated by Yael Lotan. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 2000.

Shamir, Moshe. The King of Flesh and Blood, translated by David Patterson. New York: Vanguard, 1958.

Shamir, Moshe. With His Own Hands, translated by Joseph Shachter. Jerusalem: Institute for the Translation of Hebrew Literature, 1970.

ANN KAHN
UPDATED BY DONNA ROBINSON DIVINE

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Moshe Shamir (Hebrew: משה שמיר) (September 15, 1921August 20, 2004) was an Israeli author, playwright, opinion writer, and public figure.

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Biography

Moshe Shamir was born in Safed. He went to the Tel Nordau School and graduated from the Herzliya Hebrew High School in Tel Aviv.

In the Israeli War of Independence he served in Palmach. He began his political career as a member of the movement Hashomer Hatzair, in which he filled a leadership role. He was one of the editors of their official newspaper Al Ha-Homa from 1939 to 1941. From 1944 to 1946 he was a member of kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek. He was founder and editor of the Israel Defense Forces official newspaper Bamahane ("In the Camp") from 1947 to 1950. During the 1950s he was a member of the editorial board of the newspaper Maariv and the editor of its literature section.

Author, Playwright, and Opinion Writer

Shamir began writing stories at a young age. They immediately attracted attention, and not only for his literary ability. He was always engaged with political problems, always arousing opposition. The first opposition came from Meir Yairi, leader of the left-wing movement to which Shamir belonged, concerning what was perceived as "ideological aberration" in his stories. In hindsight it is difficult to understand what the fuss was about. The stories seem completely innocent and certainly are not hostile or injurious to the kibbutz movement. However, the anger that was aroused against Shamir was so strong that he decided to leave his kibbutz in 1947 for ideological reasons.

Shamir's first story, appearing in print in 1940, dealt with Abraham and the binding of Isaac. The story was published in the youth movement newspaper Al Ha-Homa.

In his 1947 novel He Walked Through the Fields, which became the first play performed in the established State of Israel, the hero is a native-born Israeli, a "Sabra". The book won the Ussishkin Prize. It was adapted as a movie directed by Yosef Milo, who also directed its theatrical debut. In 1947, he became the chief editor of the Haganah (later Israel Defense Forces) newspaper Bamahane. He edited it until he was dismissed at the request of David Ben-Gurion for publishing an article about a celebration of the disbanding of Palmach. Thereafter he continually aroused scandals, more than any other Hebrew author of our time.

A survey made in the 50s by the Szold Institute found that two thirds of respondents preferred Shamir to all other Israeli authors. He was the most prominent representative of his generation of writers, much as Etgar Keret was to the writers of the 1990s.

From the first, Shamir was simultaneously an author, thinker, ideologue, and politician. Furthermore he was highly controversial, so that in his first decades he was nearly estranged from the very camp to which he originally belonged.

The hero of his book With His Own Hands: Alik's Story (1951) is his brother Alik who fell in the War of Independence. The book became an icon of that war. Alik's Story was translated into English, adapted into radio plays, and even merited an adaptation for television. It is one of the greatest Israeli bestsellers of all time, selling to date over 150,000 copies. It became part of the program of study in schools.

Two of Shamir's books, Under the Sun (1950) and That You Are Naked (1959) are autobiographical pieces based on his life in the thirties and forties. Shamir valued them far above his more famous works, considering them his best, although very few agree with him. Shamir wrote additional books about the members of his family: With His Own Heart about his father, and Not Far From the Tree about his family history.

Besides The King of Flesh and Blood, his most translated book was actually a lesser known children's book, The Fifth Wheel (1961). It is about the adventures of a kibbutznik, dispatched to bring a tractor from the port, who at every step meets various and sundry obstacles and adventures.

As a young writer Shamir became accustomed to the heavy hand of criticism. He especially took criticism from Joseph Klausner concerning The King of Flesh and Blood, whose central character is the Hasmonean king Alexander Jannæus. Menachem Begin recalled Klausner's words in a later day when Moshe Shamir, as a member of the Knesset, crossed the political lines from left to right to oppose the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty. As the prime minister at the time, Begin spoke out against Shamir in the Knesset, indicating that Shamir's objections showed a lack of awareness of the historic moves taking place. He said to Shamir (in Hebrew):

Certainly you recall that, in his day, the late Prof. Joseph Klausner wrote, when you published your book The King of Flesh and Blood, these words: "There may sometimes be a writer who is not a historian, but to such an extent?" And now I say: "There may sometimes be a politician who does not recognize the rustling wings of history, but to such an extent?"

Moshe Shamir also wrote poetry. However, most of his trade was in prose. He was a prolific author, publishing in the course of his life more than 25 books. Thus he is best recognized as a novelist and a playwright.

He died in Rishon LeZion at the age of 83. He was survived by his wife Tzvia.

Awards

Among the various prizes received by Shamir for his work were the following:

Political activity

Moshe Shamir
Date of birth 15 September 1921
Place of birth Safed, Palestine
Date of death 21 August 2004 (aged 82)
Knesset(s) 9
Party Tehiya-Bnai
Former parties Likud

He was active in Mapam. After the Six-Day War, similarly to the songwriter Naomi Shemer, he changed his political leaning. He became one of the creators of the Movement for Greater Israel (Eretz Israel HaShlema, literally "Whole Land of Israel"), a part of the La'am faction in the Likud. He was elected to the Knesset in the legislative elections of 1977. He was among the founders of the "Bnai" faction (acronym for a phrase meaning "Union of Eretz Israel Faithful") that opposed the Camp David Accords (1978). In late 1979, after the Israel-Egypt peace treaty, he broke away from Likud, along with Knesset member Geula Cohen, to founder the Tehiya Bnai.

His shift from left to right took a toll on him as the main literary societies, taking a dim view, banned him from membership.

Works published in English translation

  • He Walked Through the Fields (1959, as a play), translation of Hu Halach Ba-Sadot (1947)
  • Taking the Mountains (1948, play)
  • With His Own Hands (1970), translation of Be-Mo Yadav (1951)
  • The King of Flesh and Blood (1958), translation of Melech Basar Va-Dam (1954)
  • David's Stranger (1965), also with title The Hittite Must Die (1978), translation of Kivsat Ha-Rash (1956)
  • The Fifth Wheel (1961), translation of Ha-Galgal Ha-Hamishi (1961)
  • My Life With Ishmael (1970, political autobiography), translation of Hayai Im Ishmael (1968)

References

  • Much of the content of this article comes from "משה שמיר" (Moshe Shamir) in the Hebrew-language Wikipedia. Retrieved October 27, 2005.

External links


 
 
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