S. Yizhar (1916–2006)
Author of Khirbet Khizeh
About the Author
S. Yizhar was the pen name of Yizhar Smilansky who taught education at the Hebrew University for many years.
Image credit: Wikipedia
Works by S. Yizhar
7 סיפורים 10 copies
ימי צקלג : סיפור 7 copies
מקדמות 6 copies
צדדיים 5 copies
ארבעה סיפורים 4 copies
סיפור חרבת חזעה 3 copies
צלהבים 2 copies
ששה ספורי קיץ 2 copies
החורשה בגבעה, ועוד שלושה סיפורים 2 copies
Ha-Hursha Be-Giva 2 copies
Meestervertellers uit tien landen 2 copies
גילוי אליהו 2 copies
Tsalhavim צלהבים 2 copies
Efrayim hozer le-aspeset 1 copy
ספור חרבת-חזעה : השבוי 1 copy
על חינוך ועל חינוך לערכים 1 copy
(חוברת) דפי ריב 1 copy
מלקומיה יפהפיה 1 copy
סיפורי מישור 1 copy
אצל הים : שלושה סיפורים 1 copy
ס. יזהר: ארבעה סיפורים 1 copy
Shayarah shel hatsot 1 copy
על חינוך ועל חינוך לערכים 1 copy
קריאה לחינוך 1 copy
תפו ופוזה 1 copy
הכרכרה של הדוד משה : סיפור 1 copy
סיפורי מישור 1 copy
Be-faate Negev 1 copy
אפרים חוזר לאספסת 1 copy
ימי צקלג: סיפור 1 copy
Tsedadiyim צדדיים 1 copy
אפרים חוזר לאספסת 1 copy
Associated Works
Israeli Stories: A Selection of the Best Contemporary Hebrew Writing (1965) — Contributor — 123 copies, 1 review
Meesters der Hebreeuwse vertelkunst — Author — 17 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Smilansky, Yizhar
סמילנסקי, יזהר - Birthdate
- 1916-09-27
- Date of death
- 2006-08-21
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Hebrew University of Jerusalem (PhD)
- Occupations
- professor emeritus (Tel Aviv University)
writer
Knesset member (1949-1967) - Organizations
- Knesset member
- Awards and honors
- Israel Prize (Literature ∙ 1959)
Bialik Prize (1991)
Brenner Prize
Emet Prize for Art, Science, and Culture - Relationships
- Smilansky, Moshe (great uncle)
- Nationality
- Israel
- Birthplace
- Rehovot, Mandatory Palestine
- Places of residence
- Rehovot, Israel (birth)
- Associated Place (for map)
- Israel
Members
Reviews
"Jews being killed. Europe. We were the masters now", 15 February 2015
This review is from: Khirbet Khizeh: A Novel (Paperback)
I didn't think I was going to get into this work, with its sometimes meandering sentences, but made a determined effort and read it in one sitting (120 p) and it's absolutely brilliant.
First published in 1949, it's narrated by a young Israeli soldier out with his platoon, carrying out orders to clear out the eponymous Arab village, remove the occupants and blow up show more the houses. Yizhar brings the whole situation to life, with vivid descriptions of the Palestinian landscape and of the soldiers' demeanour:
'there was to be no battle for us today...today we were going on an outing.'
But as the remaining Arabs are heartlessly 'cleared' onto 'transports', the reader sees uncomfortable similarities with the awful situation of the Jews themselves in Europe just a few years previously. As the narrator, himself opposed to the situation, observes:
'the Diaspora...Our nation's protest to the world: exile! It had entered me, apparently, with my mother's milk. what, in fact, had we perpetrated here today?'
Very powerful read, and for readers like myself who weren't around in the 40s, very informative. This edition is enhanced by an afterword by David Shulman which explains some of the Biblical references in 'Yizhar's dense web of allusion', and discusses the situation today between settlers and their Palestinian neighbours. show less
This review is from: Khirbet Khizeh: A Novel (Paperback)
I didn't think I was going to get into this work, with its sometimes meandering sentences, but made a determined effort and read it in one sitting (120 p) and it's absolutely brilliant.
First published in 1949, it's narrated by a young Israeli soldier out with his platoon, carrying out orders to clear out the eponymous Arab village, remove the occupants and blow up show more the houses. Yizhar brings the whole situation to life, with vivid descriptions of the Palestinian landscape and of the soldiers' demeanour:
'there was to be no battle for us today...today we were going on an outing.'
But as the remaining Arabs are heartlessly 'cleared' onto 'transports', the reader sees uncomfortable similarities with the awful situation of the Jews themselves in Europe just a few years previously. As the narrator, himself opposed to the situation, observes:
'the Diaspora...Our nation's protest to the world: exile! It had entered me, apparently, with my mother's milk. what, in fact, had we perpetrated here today?'
Very powerful read, and for readers like myself who weren't around in the 40s, very informative. This edition is enhanced by an afterword by David Shulman which explains some of the Biblical references in 'Yizhar's dense web of allusion', and discusses the situation today between settlers and their Palestinian neighbours. show less
Khirbet Khizeh is an Arab village in the newly formed state of Israel, designated to be cleared by Israeli forces, made uninhabitable, and its occupants exiled. The novel, originally published in 1949 and written from an Israeli soldier's perspective, it was only recently translated from Hebrew. While nearly seventy years since the birth of the Israeli state and the genesis of this story, it expresses a fundamental tension that still exists: a many-times exiled Jewish people find themselves show more doing the same unto another group. It's a short, thought-provoking read, told by someone who understands the stress, the fear, the boredom, and the conflicts that can arise between duty and conscience in service to the state. I can't speak to the quality of the translation, but I can say it's expressed beautifully in English. The NYT book review intrigued me enough to read it http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/22/books/review/khirbet-khizeh-by-s-yizhar.html show less
It's not KK, it's me: that this book is wise I can agree with absolutely. That it is "still-shockingly wise," as the blurb suggests, is a little bit much. Turns out the Israeli occupation wasn't and isn't all that noble a thing. The prose was decent, but not so good that it took me away from the obviousness of the rest of the book. I'm glad this was written, that it's still in print, and that people are reading it. But I think I just expected too much.
An anomalously lovely account of the evacuation of a Palestinian village by young Israeli soldiers largely unaware of what they are doing to other people's lives. It is connected in various ways to My Happiness Bears No Relation to Happiness: a Poet's Life in the Palestinian Century by Adina Hoffman, about Israeli Arab poet Taha Muhamad Ali.
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Statistics
- Works
- 45
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 367
- Popularity
- #65,578
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 8
- ISBNs
- 19
- Languages
- 7
- Favorited
- 4













