THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS f9 BAD CHECKS!! DELINQUENT ACCOUNTS!! The Nobel Prize for the Shte tl Mysticist (Continued from Page 1) Then came The Magi- cian of Lublin" (1960), "The Spinoze of Market Street" (1961), "The Slave" (1962), "Short Friday" (1964), "In My Father's Court" (1966), "Enemies: A Love Story" (1969), "A Crown of Feath- ers" (1973), and "Passions" (1976). He also wrote books for children and is currently working on'what he calls a spiritual autobiography. Singer's big family chronicles, "The Family Moskat," "The Manor" and "The Estate" have been compared with the massive ' Thomas Mann novel "Bud- denbrooks." Like Mann, Singer delineates how - families are shattered by the new epoch and its de- mands over a time span from the mid-19th Century to World War II. An appreciation of his writings, issued by the Swedish Academy, declared that his writings on the Jewish quarter of Warsaw, destined for destruction by the Nazis during World War II, restored the ghetto to life. The academy declared, ! "It is the world and life of Forward and for myself. It is East European Jewry, such the greatest thing to have, as it was lived in the cities happened to Yiddish litera- and villages, in poverty and ture. It is the first time a persecution, and imbued man won the Nobel award with sincere piety and rites, who is known mostly in combined with blind faith translation." and superstition." Singer Weber said the award has always written in Yid- dish, and has said fre- would give "a tremendous quently that he not only boost" to Yiddish literature. writes in Yiddish but that He said he had been receiv- he writes "about people who ing calls all morning, fol- lowing the announcement speak Yiddish." of the award, from readers Simon Weber, editor of wanting to know where the Forward, said that they could get Singer's work Singer told him that he in Yiddish. Morris U. never wrote for prizes. "I Schappes, historian and am not forgetting for one editor of Jewish Currents, moment that writers in said, "It is high time that a previous times did not __-Ariddish writer was recog- write for prizes but this nized with a Nobel award." did not diminish their In a telephone interview greatness," Weber said with the JTA from his Singer had told him. winter home in Miami, Singer, Weber added, said Singer said he was initially he would always remember surprised when he learned that he owes everhting to he had won the award but the Forward bec-ause it was after four or five hours, he there that his writings first was no longer surprised. "I appeared. Weber told. the think it is good for the Yid- Jewish Telegraphic Agency dish language," he said. "He that for him the Nobel called the award a "victory award to Singer was "the for Yiddishism and for those proudest moment for the who love' this language." * * * `Shoste An Autobiographically Superb Isaac Bashevis Singer Novel "Shosha;" Isaac Bashevis Singer's latest novel (Far- rar, Straus and Giroux), re- presents the genius of the newest literary Nobelist. It IS a love story, about a • man with many flames in his affections. It is the tale of a man of letters who came to New York from war-torn Poland. "Shosha" is de- picted from age 9, a girl of complicity, growing into a symbol of the womanhood that lived through the years of terror, later to be remem- bered in the recollections of the author as he meets with survivors depicting the af- termath of the great calam- ity in a reunion in Israel. "Shosha" is more than a novel. It is a reflection on history, the crucial era of the World War II tragedies, the survivors' after- thoughts, their introspec- tions, their views on -a new life after the destruction of the dreams of their early years under stress. "Shosha" may be viewed as It is philosophy on one of Isaac Bashevis Sing- Jewish experiences, their er's most creative works. views on the godly and "Shosha" is a novel rooted in . the demoniacal. American and Israeli ex- It is the story of people periences. The beginnings who will confront the in- are in the areas of death and evitable and attune to anew destruction in the years life, never making peace preceding Hitler in Poland, marked by a continuity that with death. It is Singer's autobiog- leaves many deep-rooted raphical dissertation, a marks of the agonies that documentary of life in struck those who are sym- America, the discovery of bolized in the novel's cast of the creativity in Israel characters. * * * emerging out of the reborn who come to Israel to build a Singer Novel new life with new dignity, new identifications that Made Into Film defy the death threats of the NEW YORK - Israeli past. film producers Menahem The new builders of a new Golan and Yoram Globus life are not religious, yet are completing the film they rise up to a faith reborn "The Magician of Lublin," that is rooted in the dignity based on the novel by Isaac of cherished traditions. Bashevis Singer. Once again, Singer the The film stars Alan Ar- mystic is the Singer of kin, Louise Fletcher, Val- faith. erie Perrine and Shelley In many respects, Winters. The Spirit of Camp David Is Not at UN' Friday, October 13, 1978 13 , He added: "I am not the only winner of the award. I share it will all my readers and all who love the Yiddish language." Singer is well known in Israel among readers of Hebrew. Three of his books, "The Slave," "The Magician of Lublin" and a collection of stories have been translated into Hebrew. His son, Israel Zamir, is a member of Kibutz Beit Alfa in the Jezreel Valley. Zamir, a writer and journalist and Singer's son from his first marriage, came to the United States to meet with his father after Is- rael's War of Indepen- dence in 1948. The result of that meeting was two stories - one by the father, the other by the son. Both stories ap- peared in Hebrew. A well-known Israeli writer, Natan Shacham, presently Israel's cultural attache at the Israel consu- late in New York, said he was "very glad that Bashevis Singer, the repre- sentative of Yiddish cul- ture, has gained the inter- national recognition which he so richly deserves." 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Addressing a press con- ference, Blum charged that the "rejectionist" Arab states - Syria, Libya, Iraq, Algeria, and South Yemen - and their Soviet bloc al- lies are using the delibera- tions of the General Assem- bly to sabotage the summit agreements. He predicted that further attacks on Is- rael and the Camp David accords will be forthcoming in the next few weeks. Blum noted, however, that in pri- vate conversations at the UN many diplomats are very supportive of the Camp David accords. Blum said that the ac- cords should not be viewed as a one-sided victory for Egypt or Israel. "It was a compromise," he said, not- ing both sides made conces- sions. Israel made far- reaehing concessions, Blum asserted, by agreeing to de- part from the national con- sensus that the Rafah Sa- lient is vital to Israel's secu- rity and should be retained, and that Sharm el-Sheikh will never be abandoned. 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