Israeli literature is written mostly in Hebrew.
If by Hebrew literature, you refer exclusively to Biblical and contemporaneous literature, there is some Israeli literature that references those texts. Some refer to The Bible for religious reasons, some reference the Bible for its imagery or to provide another view of one of its stories, and the remainder may have absolutely no connection to Ancient Hebrew literature.
Most literature written in Israel is in Hebrew. Hebrew is the main national language of Israel.
Yosef Oren has written: ''Iyunim be-\\' 'An unconventional attitude toward Israeli literature' -- subject(s): Hebrew literature, Modern, History and criticism, Israeli literature, Modern Hebrew literature
The Hebrew word for Israeli is Israeli. It is spelled ישראלי.
There is no language called Israeli. People speak Hebrew and they write using Hebrew alphabets.
Benzion Benshalom has written: 'Hebrew literature between the two world wars' -- subject(s): Hebrew literature
Hebrew literature is written using the Hebrew language. No other literature is written that way (or else it would become Hebrew literature).
Israeli = Yisra'eli (ישראלי), pronounced Yeess-rah-el-ee
aysh (or "esh" in Israeli Hebrew) = אשesh means "fire"
He was Jewish, Hebrew, Israeli.
Parliament, or Knesset in Hebrew.
She was an Israeli, a Palestinian, a Hebrew.
Jew, Jewish, Israelite, Israeli...