PEOPLE 5749 5 750 El Al is pleased to announce a very special departure and arrival. Happy Rosh Hashanah. ELL AL Beautyworks 29306 Northwestern, Southfield Next to Franklin Racquet Club 356-6590 Cranbrook REALTORS Best wishes to all our customers for a happy and healthy New Year 134 Franklin 32440 Franklin Rd. 626-8700 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1989 West Bloomfield 5839 W. Maple 855-2200 Dahn Ben-Amotz's Irreverent Farewell LISA SAMIN W A Happy and Healthy New Year To Our Many Friends Bloomfield Hills 950 N. Hunter 540-5500 A friend shares a joke with Dahn Ben-Amotz, right. Special to The Jewish News * The Airline of Israel. ASSOC inc., om, Birmingham 1424 S. Woodward 645-2500 hat does a man who has been a recog- nized, notrious, ir- reverant non-conformist most of his life, do when confronted by death? If that man is Dahn Ben-Amotz, he invites 150 of his closest friends, admirers and critics and arranges a funeral party for himself. Dahn Ben-Amotz is a noted Israeli writer, satirical colum- nist and humorist, myth- maker, taboo breaker and one of the more colorful per- sonalities in Israel's cultural and artistic society. After undergoing a coronary bypass and discovering he has pan- creatic cancer, doctors gave him less than a year to live. Ben-Amotz decided to celebrate himself and his im- minent death by throwing a party. He invited his closest friends, many of Israel's bohe- mian elite as well as those who visited him during his long hospital stay. The invita- tion read "The dress rehear- sal for the real event." Ben- Amotz, an egoist to the end, wanted to direct, produce and act in the "dress rehearSal" as he had done during his years as manager of "Hamam," a satirical theater. Ben-Amotz, who had writ- ten his own eulogy more than ten years ago, read it public- ly on many occasions. It was recognized as a piece of humrous writing, but now, it was made up of his final words about his life and himself. The atmosphere was unusual; a mixture of grief and laughter, pain and joy. Ben-Amotz's past was one of paradoxes and extremes, where confrontation with near death was common. Born in Poland in 1923, he came to Palestine in 1938, while his parents stayed behind, eventually to perish in the Holocaust. Ben-Amotz was a member of the Palmach, an elite troop of the Haganah in Israel's War of In- dependence. His escapades were outrageous, his dreams for the creation of the State of Israel relentless. A humorist, Ben-Amotz's most recent work includes a column in the newspaper Hadashot, expressing highly independent views and his book, Bag of Lies, a collection of stories about the Palmach, written in 1956 with poet Hayim Hefer. Ben-Amotz also wrote a semi-autobiographi- cal novel in 1968, To Remember and to Forget. In it he delves into his past and the conflicts which arose out of having left his parents behind in Poland to perish at the hands of the Germans. He also addresses the issue of guilt and morality of the Ger- man peple. Ben—Amotz was once the heart of the Tel Aviv cafe. society. At his favorite cafe, Bonanza, he would often be found verbally sparring with his long-time feuding partner Amos Kenan, another well- known Israeli personality. Jerusalem journalist Robert Rosenberg, once wrote of Ben- Amotz, "It is easy to regard him as a personification of Israeli attributes — rude, ar- rogant, charming, inventive — and peple with those at- tributes . . . tend to make enemies and lose friends." But Ben-Amotz's par- ty/funeral seemed to defy that statement, as friends paid their last tribute to a man whom author Meir Shalev described as "one of the most influential." ❑