Tuesday, March 05, 2013

Books and history - C.K.Stead finds a parallel

Author/literary critic C.K.Stead (left) liked the story about the Palestinian lawyer driven out in the 1948 war whose books vanished and are now discovered in the Jewish library labelled as abandoned
   
He has supplied a short extract from his novel The Secret History of Modernism (Vintage 2001) which has parallel concerns, Jewish then Palestinian, about treasured books which go missing:



Extract from chapter 16 of The Secret History of Modernism:
 ‘Let me tell you a story,’ he said.  ‘I read it somewhere - in something in there.’  He waved towards a low table in his flat that was littered with books, magazines and overseas papers.
            It was about an elderly Tel Aviv Jew who had been evicted in 1938 from his apartment in Vienna.  He had managed to get out and away to Palestine, but all his books had been left behind, and that was the loss which troubled him most.  It became the symbol, or the focus, of all the bad things that had happened to him.  Years later, when the war was over, he revisited Vienna with his daughter.  They stood in the courtyard looking up at where he had once lived.  A woman, suspicious and unfriendly, asked what they wanted.  He explained that he’d once lived there, and had left in a hurry.  ‘In 1938’, he said, expecting she would know what that meant.  All his books had been left behind.  The woman, even more unfriendly, said there had been no books when she occupied the apartment after the war.  That was all.  He went back to Israel.
            More years passed.  The daughter lived with her husband in Jaffa in an apartment once occupied by Arabs, some of whom had been driven out by the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.  One day she found two Arab women, mother and daughter, standing in the courtyard looking up at the windows of her apartment.  She went and spoke to them.  The mother had grown up there.  The Jewish woman invited them in.  They went through, looking at all the rooms, saying nothing, until suddenly the older woman asked, ‘Where are my father’s books?’

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