After tragedy, Dvora Omer found flaws, beauty in the nation’s founding figures, turning them into literary heroes
By Liel Leibovitz for Tablet![Dvora Omer Dvora Omer](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_t6E_fvRO6XYbchPoa3YkTMPnxeXELGD6IunpAL0L4fzlMlMEIfHYqLvrCBhEOhd8NEw8rsbMz0YmlS9YHA0qMejbe0plpYZYoooul2U8QtY-4v1McrIURkbZWBlyt4KB4x-fwNCbEMV_pz-t9miAog--3UvzURESDkcrnoheFH8czH-0Yxoel61DpWpbU=s0-d)
There
are many different ways to be dumb about literature. When you’re in
high school, the men and women who teach it to you—sometimes passionate
and sweet, too often underpaid, insecure, and sour—insist that your
primary task as a reader is to decipher the hidden meanings that the
author weaved throughout the text like a serial killer leaving behind
clues to taunt his weary pursuers. When you’re in college, the men and
women who teach it to you—also underpaid, also probably sour—turn their
attention from text to author, wrestling the creative spirit down to the
therapist’s couch and squeezing it until, anguished, it is ready to cry
uncle, or, more likely, mother. Both approaches are vile and joyless,
but when it comes to Dvora Omer—the great Israeli writer of novels for
young adults who passed away earlier this year—they seem inevitable:
More than those of any other writer I can think of, Omer’s life and work
are best understood as threads of the same tale, an epic poem of
sacrifice and betrayal on which all Israeli children were reared.
Omer
was born in a northern kibbutz in 1932, and her parents divorced when
she was an infant, her father moving to another kibbutz and marrying
another woman. He would visit his firstborn infrequently, once every few
months, each visit culminating in the little girl sobbing and begging
him to stay. He never did. Then, Omer’s mother died when the future
literary lioness was only 11 years old. At the time, she was told that
her mother was unhappy and had shot herself. At the funeral, Dvora was
ordered to stop crying, as weakness was unbecoming of true and tough
kibbutzniks. If that wasn’t enough, Galia, her caretaker at the kibbutz,
disappeared shortly thereafter, leaving Omer all alone.
She took
to writing, making up fantastical tales in which everyone was happy and
no one was dead. Her teachers told her that her stories were horrible,
often adding that she had no talent and urging her to abandon her
literary ambitions for more useful tasks like cooking or cleaning. Omer,
however, persevered: In 1959, after a stint as a teacher, she published
her first book, The Pages of Tamar, a novel in diary form detailing the
everyday life of a perfectly normal girl from a perfectly normal family
living in a fictitious kibbutz. It was a hit. Tamar and her tightly
knit clan were for Israelis what the Ingalls family had been for
Americans—a shamelessly romanticized and utterly charming account of
frontier life that was both an operatic celebration of the nation’s
founding pioneers and an intimate portrayal of daily life in harsh
conditions.
Continue reading.