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A Hebrew text message

Israeli writers and thinkers Amos Oz and his daughter Fania affirm 'true' story over biblical narrative

December 7, 2012 15:08
Closing words? Philip Roth says he's had enough of reading and writing

ByNatasha Lehrer, Natasha Lehrer

2 min read

In this provocative, playful, speculative journey through the rich, centuries-old heritage of Jewish literature, father and daughter Amos Oz and Fania Oz-Salzberger propose a “textline” rather than a bloodline — a notion of Jewish lineage that is etched not in blood but in words, spoken and written.

Quoting Yehuda Amichai, they measure Jewish continuity not through archaeology or history, but “on the scale of a different measurement” — a scale made of words.

Oz the novelist, and his daughter, a historian of ideas, insist on an engagement with Jewish texts that is dissociated from religion. They remind us repeatedly that they are secular Jewish Israelis: “We do not believe in God… our Jewish identity is not faith-powered”.

For non-religious Israeli Jews, who have Hebrew as their mother tongue, the relationship to Hebrew texts is facilitated but problematical, and part of the impulse behind the writing of this book is the desire to reclaim a textual heritage for secular Jews.