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  • Israelis And Palestinians Hail Writers And The Word, Just Not With O

    ISRAELIS AND PALESTINIANS HAIL WRITERS AND THE WORD, JUST NOT WITH ONE ANOTHER
    By ETHAN BRONNER

    New York Times
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/07/world/midd leeast/07jerusalem.html
    May 6 2010
    JERUSALEM

    There are moments in this splintered and hardhearted city when
    skeptics become believers. Thursday night -- the ancient walls
    lighted up, the air filled with honeysuckle and jasmine -- felt
    like such a moment. Distinguished foreign authors and talented local
    musicians threw themselves into a celebration of literature, music
    and international fellowship.

    But while this is a city of stones, it is also a city of mirrors.

    There was not one party on Thursday but two, Israeli and Palestinian,
    each oblivious to the other.

    The Palestine Festival of Literature and the International Writers
    Festival of Israel both took place this week without mutual awareness
    or acknowledgment, and each closed Thursday night with readings and
    songs. Both festivals were ostensibly about the beauty of words,
    but neither could avoid the grimness of deeds.

    "Everyone here is obsessed with restoring some part of the past,"
    observed Amos Oz, Israel's most celebrated writer, at the Israeli
    festival earlier in the week. "Many came to Jerusalem not to build
    and be rebuilt but to crucify or be crucified."

    Still, power relations are hardly equal here and there was no escaping
    at either conference the suffering brought upon the Palestinians
    by Israeli security policies, although there were nuances of
    interpretation.

    "I was infuriated," said Nancy Kricorian, a New York City novelist and
    poet who visited here for the first time as part of the Palestinian
    festival and faced military checkpoints and the separation barrier.

    The question that hovered at both festivals was how the reading of
    good books could make a difference. Nir Baram, a young Israeli writer
    who addressed the opening of the Israeli festival, offered an answer.

    "Kafka said that a book should serve as the ax for the frozen sea
    within us," he said. "There are many things that we don't talk about,"
    and he included among those "the systematic confiscation of the rights
    of non-Jews in Israel and the territories." He said Israelis had
    stopped noticing it, the way those who live by the sea stop hearing
    the waves. His comments caused a stir among several members of the
    government who were in the audience.

    The writers at the Palestinian events knew nothing of Mr. Baram's talk
    but they would have been interested. They spent the week traveling
    around the West Bank from universities to cultural centers, and got a
    dose of Israeli checkpoints and Palestinian frustration that included
    five hours at the Jordan-West Bank border while Israeli officials
    questioned those with Arabic names.

    In Ramallah, in the garden of an old house used by the late Palestinian
    poet Mahmoud Darwish, Ms. Kricorian read on Wednesday from her novel
    "Zabelle," based on the harsh experiences of her Armenian grandmother
    at the hands of the Turks. The reading told of displacement and
    suffering, painfully familiar themes in the audience.

    Another writer, Mahmoud Shuqeir, a Palestinian, brought down the house
    with laughter as he recounted a story of his in which Michael Jackson,
    Naomi Campbell and Donald Rumsfeld are brought as guests to Ramallah.

    Long story short: his uncle ends up a prisoner at Guantánamo Bay.

    The Israelis didn't get to hear that one. But a night earlier, in
    Jerusalem, in a city-owned guesthouse for writers and artists known
    as Mishkenot Sha'ananim, the Israeli author David Grossman and the
    American novelist Paul Auster chatted onstage about their writing
    routines, their friendship and their fears.

    It was a sparkling conversation covering, among other things, the
    surprising pleasure of narrating a novel in the voice of a woman and
    the pain of saying goodbye to characters after a work is completed.

    "It's like being a couple," Mr. Grossman said of living with his own
    invented characters. "You change each other." Mr. Auster, accompanied
    to the festival by his wife, the author Siri Hustvedt, agreed. He
    spoke of the current pause in his life, having recently finished a
    novel but not yet started the next one. The talk turned soon enough
    to what Israelis call "hamatzav," "the situation."

    Mr. Auster was last here in early 1997 and was struck by the darker
    mood he now found. Thirteen years ago, peace between Israel and its
    neighbors seemed a real likelihood. Not today, he said. Despite the
    presence in town of George J. Mitchell, the Obama administration's
    Middle East envoy, today things seem worse. Israel, he said, worries
    about its very survival.

    Again, it seemed like the two groups of writers could benefit from
    hearing one another's reflections. Should the festivals meet? Should
    Jonathan Safran Foer and Nicole Krauss, A. B. Yehoshua and Daniel
    Mendelsohn, all of whom were speakers in Israel, join Geoff Dyer,
    Victoria Brittain and Raja Shehadeh, the writers on the other side?

    Yes, said Anthony David, an American biographer and professor at the
    Bard Honors College of Al Quds University in East Jerusalem. "It is
    ridiculous to have writers from all over the world in the same city
    and not meeting each other," he said as he waited in Ramallah for
    a reading to begin. "The boycott thinking here among Palestinians
    is so entrenched that people are threatened by meeting people from
    the Israeli side. Building networks is the only way to undermine
    nefarious forces."

    But Ahdaf Soueif, an Egyptian-British author who runs the Palestinian
    festival, disagreed. "I feel that Palestinians are too often seen as
    an adjunct or reverse side of another coin," she said. "Palestine is
    an entity in its own right and it deserves its own festival. If the
    day comes when Jerusalem is a shared capital, then we can reconsider."

    One of her guest writers, Adam Foulds, who read at the festival from
    his narrative poem, "Broken Words," said he understood.

    Mr. Foulds, who is a British Jew, spent a year on an Israeli kibbutz
    17 years ago and had never been to the Palestinian cities of the West
    Bank. He was surprised by what he found.

    "You hear so much about the rage, the violent mood," he said, "but I
    have found a language of peace, freedom and justice. The festival is
    recognition of the independent life of the Palestinian people. Coming
    through the invisible barrier of fear has actually filled me with
    hope. I found deep humanity on the other side."

    This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

    Correction: May 7, 2010

    A picture caption in an earlier version of this article misidentified
    the Indian writer on screen. She is Arundhati Roy, not Ritu Menon.
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