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Interview: Eli Amir

Iraqi voice that is increasing in volume

March 25, 2010 10:48
Eli Amir: showing pain and sorrow

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Anonymous,

Anonymous

2 min read

Eli Amir was born in Baghdad in 1937. At the age of 13, he went into exile along with 120,000 Iraqi Jews to Israel. He went on to serve the Israeli government as a ministerial adviser on Arab affairs and immigrant absorption. He is active in The Abraham Fund for coexistence and equality between Israeli Arabs and Jews.

Above all, though, he is a literary celebrity, well known in Israel for his novels about Iraqi-Jewish experience.His books are part of the national curriculum. He is also gaining recognition in the Arab world, especially in Egypt.

In London to promote the English translation of the trilogy known by the title of its first section, The Dove Flyer, Amir suggests, in the rather apt setting of a hotel facing the Regent's Park Mosque, that "the Israelis didn't understand that we are Arabs. We know the culture, the food, the language, the customs."

When Amir and his family were taken to the ma'abara, the immigrant camp, they were given half a tent to sleep in and spaghetti to eat. His brother thought he had been given a plate of worms.