Boaz Evron (Hebrew: בועז עברון, June 6, 1927 - September 15, 2018),[1] alternatively transliterated Boas Evron[2] was a left-wing[3] Israeli journalist and critic.[4]
Boaz Evron
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בועז עברון
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Born | (1927-08-06)August 6, 1927 |
Died | September 15, 2018(2018-09-15) (aged 91) |
Education | Hebrew University |
Family | Yoel Moshe Salomon (grandfather) |
Evron was born in Jerusalem. He attended Herzliya Hebrew High School and Hebrew University. Evron's family had lived in Palestine since the early nineteenth century; he was a great-grandson of Yoel Moshe Salomon, one of the founders of Petah Tikva.[1]
He was a member of Lehi and the Canaanite movement early in his life and remained critical of Zionism and supportive of some of Canaanism's tenets.[1][4] In 1956 he co-founded the political group Semitic Action. His writings were published in Semitic Action's journal Etgar and in Tzipor HaNefesh, a paper edited by Amos Kenan and Dahn Ben-Amotz.
He worked for Haaretz from 1956 to 1964 and for Yediot Aharonot from 1964 to 1992. At Yediot, Evron wrote a column which appeared on the same page as Kenan's; their page in the paper was given the satirical nickname "Fatahland" in reference to their perceived sympathy for the Palestinians.[5] He also translated books by Bertrand Russell and Edith Nesbit into Hebrew. Evron was the director of the Beit Zvi theater school from 1970 until 1979.[6] He was on the editorial board of the Palestine-Israel Journal.[7]
Evron died in 2018 at the age of 91.[8]
In Hebrew
In English