Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Personal life  





2 Career  



2.1  Second Exodus research  







3 Poetry  



3.1  Peace poetry  





3.2  The power of the poem  





3.3  Style  







4 Works  



4.1  Editor  





4.2  Non-fiction  





4.3  Novels  





4.4  Children's books  





4.5  Poetry collections  





4.6  Magazines  





4.7  IFLAC anthologies  





4.8  Film  







5 References  














Ada Aharoni






العربية
Hausa
עברית
مصرى
 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 




In other projects  



Wikimedia Commons
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Ada Aharoni
Ada Aharoni
Born30.7.1933
NationalityIsraeli, French
Occupation(s)Writer, poet, dramatist, sociologist
AwardsHaifa Honorary Citizen Award.

Israeli President’s Award for peace culture. Laureate Tèmoignage Prize, Paris, 2014.

Hebrew Writers Association: Honorary Award for creative works for the promotion of Hebrew Culture, 2017.
Websitehttps://iflac.wordpress.com https://adaaharonihebrew.wordpress.com

Ada Aharoni (Hebrew: עדה אהרוני; born Andrée Yadid, 1933) is an Egyptian-born Israeli poet, writer, lecturer, sociologist and peace researcher. She has published numerous books of peace poetry, historical novels, sociology, history, biography, drama, film-scripts, literary criticism, and children's books. In her work she often focuses on the "Second Exodus", the uprooting of the Jews from Egypt, following the establishment of Israel in 1948, which she personally experienced. Aharoni is the founder and world president of The International Forum for the Literature and Culture of Peace (IFLAC).

Personal life

[edit]

Aharoni was born in Cairo, in a Jewish family of French nationality. She attended the Alvernia English School for Girls, a convent school in the neighborhood of Zamalek, where she was taught English literature by Irish Franciscan nuns. "At the age of 10 I already decided going to be a writer,"[1] she stated during an interview with The Jerusalem Post. In 1949, her father, an export-import merchant of flour, had his work permit revoked, and the Egyptian authorities confiscated the money he had transferred to a Swiss bank. The family moved to France, and Aharoni moved to Israel soon after, at the age of 16. Aharoni was married to Haim Aharoni for 55 years until he died in 2006.[2] He was a professor at the Faculty of Chemical Engineering at Technion. They had two children, Ariel and Talia. Talia died from breast cancer in 2011. Aharoni lives in Haifa, Israel.

Career

[edit]

Ada Aharoni received her Bachelor of Arts degree in history, sociology and English literature from the University of Haifa, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. In 1964, she received her M.Phil. Degree on the literature of Henry Fielding, from the University of London's (Birkbeck College) and was awarded her Ph.D. on Saul Bellow's Introspective Fiction at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, in 1975.[citation needed]

Aharoni taught literature at the University of Haifa and sociology and conflict resolution at the Technion (Israel Institute of Technology) in Haifa. She worked as a guest lecturer and visiting professor at several universities, including the University of Pennsylvania, where she became professor.[citation needed]

She is the founder and world president of The International Forum for the Literature and Culture of Peace (IFLAC). Established in 1999, its goal is to build "bridges of understanding and peace through culture, literature and communication." IFLAC Directors and Peace Ambassadors are appointed in some 20 countries.[citation needed] She and Dr. Vijay Kumar Roy have edited 3 anthologies benefiting the organization, focusing on war, terror, and human trafficking.[3] [4] [5]

Aharoni organized the Second World Congress of the Jews from Egypt (WCJE) in 2006 at Haifa University. Aharoni served as the president of the organization, assembling 350 researchers and writers. The WCJE held two additional symposiums at Haifa University in 2007 and Bar Ilan University in 2008.[citation needed] Aharoni, Aimee Israel-Pelletier, and Levana Zamir published the proceedings of the congress in History and Culture of the Jews of Egypt in Modern Times (Keness Hafakot, Tel Aviv, 2008), in English, French and Hebrew.[2]

In 2012, she was awarded the President's Award by Shimon Peres, for Volunteerism and peace culture[6] for promoting peace initiatives between Jews and Arabs. In 2015, she was elected Honorary Citizen of Haifa (Yakir Haifa). She was the first woman, invited to speak in the Mahmood Mosque in Kababir, Haifa in 2012.

Second Exodus research

[edit]

The term "Second Exodus" coined by Ada Aharoni, refers to the forced migration of the Jews from Arab countries after the State of Israel was founded in 1948. Out of the estimated million Jews that were displaced, the majority found refuge in Israel, while 650,000 Palestinians fled or were ousted from Israel. This displacement of Jews has been overlooked in the various efforts for peace between the Israelis and Palestinians, Aharoni writes in her research paper The Forced Migration of Jews from Arab Countries and Peace,[7] and also in an YnetNews article called What about the Jewish Nakba?[8] She argues that these two tragedies and their commonalities could have a conciliatory effect on both sides which could be beneficial to the promotion of peace.

In their joint article titled Possibilities of Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Resolution Based On Mutual Recognition Of National Aspirations,[9] Aharoni and her husband, Haim Aharoni, write that the settlement of Palestinian refugees in Israel should be very limited, and that refugees, if "returned" to the place that has become part of Israel, would find themselves in a place foreign to them:

Processes that take place in a society are rarely reversible processes; repair of wrongs and compensation on suffering cannot usually be accomplished by a return to the previous situation but by the creation of a new situation that is beneficial while appropriate to the new conditions.

The Golden Age of the Jews from Egypt – Uprooting and Revival in Israel (Orion Publishing, 2013.)[10] contains 73 stories of Jewish refugees from Egypt compiled by Aharoni.

Poetry

[edit]

Aharoni's poems can be broadly divided into three categories: Peace, Love and Women. Often they overlap, and peace, abolishment of war, equality for women, and the power of women for peace are prominent in her poems. One of her most published peace poems is A Bridge of Peace, a message from an Israeli to a Palestinian woman. Robert Nissenson, and Yigal Alfassi composed music to Ada Aharoni's poems. They are sung by Revital Levanon and Anat Yagen and other singers, on the disc "A Green Week" and other discs, and played on radio and TV (1999–2021). Latest discs by singer and composer Shoshia Beeri Dotan "Peace Flower", and various poems, including『Ä Bridge of Peace』were composed and sung by Shlomo Ron and Rani Hellerman.[citation needed]

Peace poetry

[edit]

At 13, just after WW2, Aharoni together with an Arab student co-edited a school magazine, called Rainbow,[1][11] at Alvernia, with the motto: Abolish wars forever. British Peace Poet Wilfred Owen became an inspiration for her own work as a Peace Poet. He made her see "the absurdity of war."[12]

Aharoni began writing poetry on the theme of war and peace during the 1973 Arab-Israeli War (Yom Kippur War). "In most of Aharoni's first published poems on the theme of war and peace, her Egyptian origins linger discreetly in the background," Joel Beinin writes in The Dispersion of Egyptian Jewry,[13] in which he examines the diversity of Egyptian Jewish identities in Egypt and in the diaspora. "The Egyptian-Israeli negotiations and interim Sinai disengagement agreements following the 1973 war apparently encouraged her to advance beyond general calls for peace to articulate more specifically what peace meant to Aharoni through recollections of her previous life in Egypt."[citation needed]

Some of these early peace poems are concerned with the struggle for the survival of Israel, as seen in To an Egyptian Soldier (written during the Yom Kippur War), where Aharoni tells him that "you will always have your Nile... but if we lose there's only the sea." The source of this "passionate attachment to her new homeland" is her recollection of what it was to be "an 'outsider', unwanted and not belonging" in Egypt, Len Goldzweig (lecturer in the Dept. of English at Haifa University) writes in the Preface of Aharoni's Poems from Israel (1992).[citation needed]

She recalls this sense of alienation in Arab Israeli Student on T.V., where the student ponders on where he belongs: Do I feel like an Israeli Arab? Or like an Arab Israeli? "I remember my own rootless wound in Egypt land – and I hurt your dangling hurt, my Semitic cousin in pain."[citation needed]

The power of the poem

[edit]

Aharoni believes that poems are suitable vehicles for building bridges of trust and respect for each other's culture and humanity.[14] As we have become more mobile, the most profound difference between us is our culture, and not the territory. Peace poems have the ability to present the stories of both sides in a conflict, "in all its reality, pain, hope and yearning for peace."

Examples of this two-sided view are found in the poems This Cursed War and Remember Me Every Time the Moon Rises Over the Sphinx, inspired by letters found on fallen Israeli and Egyptian soldiers during the Yom Kippur War.[citation needed]

"The only way to bridge the cultural differences between human beings is through knowledge of each other,"[15] Aharoni told Birute Regine during an interview for Regine's book Iron Butterflies: Women Transforming Themselves and the World, in which Aharoni is one of the Iron Butterflies. In her poem A Bridge of Peace, Aharoni extends a bridge to the women of Palestine: "My Arab sister, let us build a sturdy bridge from your olive world to mine, from my orange world to yours... we do not want to make each other afraid under our vines and under our fig trees."[citation needed]

Rare Flower (2012), a moving poetry collection about love and peace spans five decades and is dedicated to the memory of her departed husband, Chaim Aharoni, and her departed daughter, Talia Aharoni Winkler. The book was translated into many languages, and nominated for a Nobel Prize, in 2014.[citation needed]

Several of Aharoni's poems are put to music and released on three CDs: A Green Week, To Haim – To Life (Love Poems) and Rare Flower.[citation needed]

In 2017 Aharoni published Horizon of Hope: (Gvanim Publishers, Tel Aviv, 2017): A Bilingual poetry collection: English-Hebrew, of love, peace, women poems, and poems based on letters of soldiers to their loved ones in Israel, during the wars in Lebanon and Gaza, as well as anti-terror on Daesh (ISIS).[citation needed]

Style

[edit]

In the Preface of Poems from Israel, Goldzweig describes the language of Aharoni's poems as unpretentious. "She doesn't hide behind words," and this creates a "ruthless honesty." He also comments on her irregular use of rhyme and stanza form. "This too, is a form of nakedness, because so much bad poetry is hidden behind strong galloping rhythms and chiming rhymes."[citation needed]

Prof. Rebecca Oxford (Alabama A&M University), in her book The Language of Peace – Communicating to Create Harmony,[16] analyzes the use of the "image of peace as a cross-cultural bridge" in Aharoni's A Bridge of Peace. In this poem, Oxford writes, the "assonance and imagery" of the words "olive world" and "orange world" bring the two women, one Israeli and one Palestinian, together and show that they have much in common. A "bridge of Jasmine understanding" can banish the fear, allowing each woman to sit with her baby "under her vine and under her fig tree and none shall make them afraid!"[citation needed]

In an interview with the Sketchbook literary journal,[17] Aharoni confirmed that she prefers open form poems as they give room for more depth and intimacy.

Works

[edit]

Editor

[edit]

Non-fiction

[edit]

Novels

[edit]

Children's books

[edit]

Poetry collections

[edit]

Magazines

[edit]

IFLAC anthologies

[edit]

Film

[edit]

Ada Aharoni created the film The Pomegranate Of Reconciliation And Honor[18][19] which highlights the need for peace between Israelis and Palestinians. Based on the author's personal experience and that of the Jews from Egypt, Ada Aharoni quotes Elie Wiesel's question at his Nobel Prize Ceremony:"Who is the enemy?" The enemy Wiesel says "Is the whose story you don't know!" Ada Aharoni tells her Palestinian friend that the Palestinian people have succeeded in telling the story of the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight, but Jews from Arab countries haven't succeeded in spreading similar awareness of the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries. In this film she tells her Palestinian neighbor her story in the hope that by the end of it they will be friends instead of enemies. [citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Blumfield, Wendy: Arrivals: From Cairo to Haifa, 1949, The Jerusalem Post, 11/29/2007
  • ^ a b היסטוריה ותרבות של יהודי מצרים בעת החדשה. Keness Hafakot. 2008. ISBN 9789655552959. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  • ^ IFLAC Peace Anthology: Anti-Terror and Peace International Forum for the Literature and Culture of Peace. 2016.
  • ^ IFLAC Peace Anthology: Anti-War and Peace International Forum for the Literature and Culture of Peace.2018. ISBN 978-1980971948
  • ^ IFLAC Peace Anthology: Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery International Forum for the Literature and Culture of Peace. 2021. ISBN 9798775435080
  • ^ Cashman, Greer Fay: Everest hero gets special citation from president, The Jerusalem Post, 09/05/2012
  • ^ Aharoni, Ada: The Forced Migration of Jews from Arab Countries and Peace Archived October 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, research paper, Technion, Haifa
  • ^ Aharoni, Ada: What about Jewish Nakba?, Ynetnews, 07/10/2009
  • ^ Aharoni, Ada and Haim: Possibilities of Israeli-Palestinian Conflict Resolution Based On Mutual Recognition Of National Aspirations Archived October 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ Liphshiz, Cnaan: Egyptian Jews record more recent "second Exodus", The Times of Israel, 03/25/2013
  • ^ Letters from Sister Mary Odile Archived October 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Headmistress of Alvernia English School for Girls, to Ada Aharoni
  • ^ Patrick Summit, Vice-President of Maltese Poets Association: An interview with Ada Aharoni from Israel, 10/05/2008
  • ^ Beinin, Joel: The Dispersion of Egyptian Jewry, chapter 8, Peace and Victimhood (1998)
  • ^ Aharoni, Ada: Peace Culture Through Poetry Archived October 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, presentation at the 36th World Congress International Institute of Sociology, Beijing, 2004
  • ^ Regine, Birute: Peace and the Gathering Power of Women, Huffington Post, 09/21/2010
  • ^ Oxford, Rebecca: The Language of Peace – Communicating to Create Harmony, section on Transformative Peace Poetry, pp. 176–177
  • ^ Interview with Ada Aharoni in Sketchbook, Vol. 6, No. 2, 2011
  • ^ "Film: "Pomegranate of Reconciliation and Honor" by Ada Aharoni « Syndic".
  • ^ "The Global Search for Education: Children Are Stars of Peace". 18 December 2017.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ada_Aharoni&oldid=1228298809"

    Categories: 
    20th-century Israeli poets
    Modern Hebrew writers
    Jewish novelists
    Israeli novelists
    Jewish poets
    Israeli poets
    Israeli women poets
    Hebrew-language poets
    1933 births
    Living people
    Alumni of Birkbeck, University of London
    Jewish refugees
    Israeli women novelists
    20th-century Israeli women writers
    Jewish women writers
    Writers from Cairo
    University of Haifa alumni
    Hebrew University of Jerusalem alumni
    Israeli sociologists
    Israeli women sociologists
    Egyptian emigrants to Israel
    Israeli women academics
    Peace and conflict scholars
    Israeli people of Egyptian-Jewish descent
    Hidden categories: 
    Webarchive template wayback links
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    BLP articles lacking sources from September 2020
    All BLP articles lacking sources
    Wikipedia articles with possible conflicts of interest from September 2020
    Articles with multiple maintenance issues
    Articles with hCards
    Articles containing Hebrew-language text
    All articles with unsourced statements
    Articles with unsourced statements from June 2022
    Articles with FAST identifiers
    Articles with ISNI identifiers
    Articles with VIAF identifiers
    Articles with WorldCat Entities identifiers
    Articles with BNF identifiers
    Articles with BNFdata identifiers
    Articles with GND identifiers
    Articles with J9U identifiers
    Articles with LCCN identifiers
    Articles with NTA identifiers
    Articles with PLWABN identifiers
    Articles with CINII identifiers
    Articles with SNAC-ID identifiers
    Articles with SUDOC identifiers
     



    This page was last edited on 10 June 2024, at 13:39 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki