S. Yizhar was the pen name of Yizhar Smilansky, born in Rehovot in A longtime member of the Knesset, he is most famous as the author of Khirbet Khizeh and the untranslated magnum opus Days of Ziklag. He died in /5(55). Long considered a classic, Khirbet Khizeh —also spelled Hirbet Hizeh (Arabic: The Ruins of Hizeh)—was first published in Israel in , some months after the end of the –49 war. On the surface, this novella is about a clean-up operation in the last months of the war. · Khirbet Khizeh, a novella by S. Yizhar, describes the efforts of an Israeli army unit to occupy and expel the residents of a fictional Palestinian village during the war. The story is told from the conflicted point of view of one of the soldiers in an engulfing stream of consciousness.
S. Yizhar: Khirbet Khizeh. Yizhar was an Israeli soldier in the Arab-Israeli war, and it is evident that this novella was based heavily on his own experience. It is the story of a soldier expelling Palestinians from the village of Khirbet Khizeh: what he sees, his tremendous ambivalence, the chatter of the soldiers around him, and the. Khirbet Khizeh (Hebrew: חִרְבֶּת חִזְעָה, also Hirbet Hizeh, Hirbet Hizah) is a historical fiction novel by Israeli writer S. Yizhar which was published in , and deals with the expulsion of the fictional village of Khirbet Hiz'ah, practically representing a depiction of all Arab villages whose inhabitants were expelled during the Arab-Israeli War in , events which. Khirbet Khizeh, a novella by S. Yizhar, describes the efforts of an Israeli army unit to occupy and expel the residents of a fictional Palestinian village during the war. The story is told from the conflicted point of view of one of the soldiers in an engulfing stream of consciousness. Written in , the novella was embraced as a classic.
N ear the beginning of Khirbet Khizeh, the extraordinary novella by S Yizhar, the narrator describes the dangers, to a soldier, of thinking: "we knew that when the thoughts came, troubles. Back when Khirbet Khizeh was published, in , there was little documentation on the expulsion of Arab Palestinians from their homes by the Haganah (later IDF, or Israel Defense Forces). S. Yizhar instead supplied the characters and narrative in part to drive a discussion of the topic when serious historians had little to say. Long considered a classic, Khirbet Khizeh —also spelled Hirbet Hizeh (Arabic: The Ruins of Hizeh)—was first published in Israel in , some months after the end of the –49 war. On the surface, this novella is about a clean-up operation in the last months of the war.
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