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Eli Amir

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Native name
  
אלי עמיר

Role
  
Writer

Name
  
Eli Amir


Employer
  
The Jewish Agency

Citizenship
  
Israeli

Movies
  
Farewell Baghdad

Eli Amir

Born
  
September 26, 1937 (age 86) (
1937-09-26
)
Baghdad, Iraq

Occupation
  
Writer and civil servant

Title
  
Director General of the Youth Aliyah Department

Education
  
Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Books
  
The Dove Flyer, Yasmine, Scapegoat: A Novel

Author Eli Amir Criticizes UNRWA


Eli Amir (Hebrew: אלי עמיר‎‎ Arabic:ايلى عمير) (September 26, 1937) is an Iraqi-born Israeli writer and civil servant. He served as director general of the Youth Aliyah Department of the Jewish Agency.

Contents

Biography

Amir was born in Baghdad, Iraq. He immigrated to Israel with his family in 1950, and went to school in Kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek. He is now living in Gilo, Jerusalem. Amir studied at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

From 1964 to 1968 he served as adviser on Arab affairs to the Prime Minister of Israel, and as envoy for the Minister of Immigration Absorption of Israel to the United States. In 1984, he was appointed Director General of the Youth Aliyah department of the Jewish Agency.

Literature

Scapegoat (1983) is a semi-autobiographical story of Nuri, a 13-year-old immigrant boy from Iraq who is sent to a kibbutz and his absorption into Israeli society. The Dove Flyer (aka Farewell, Baghdad) (1992) is the story of 17-year-old Kabi Imari, an Iraqi Jewish boy growing up in a Zionist family. Saul's Love (1998) is a romance between Saul, born to a deeply rooted Sephardi family from Jerusalem, and Chaya, an Ashkenazi holocaust survivor. Jasmine (2005) is also largely autobiographical. The book's protagonist, Nuri Amari, who as a child had immigrated with his family from Iraq, is appointed to a government post in East Jerusalem in the wake of the Six-Day War. He meets Jasmine, a young Palestinian widow from a wealthy Christian refugee family.

Scapegoat is included in the Israeli secondary school syllabus, and was adapted into a play and television series.

Awards

Amir received Youth Aliyah's Jubilee Prize (1983), the Jewish Literature Prize (in Mexico, 1985), the Ahi Award (1994), Am Oved's Jubilee Prize (1994), the Yigal Allon Prize for Outstanding Service to Society (1997), the Book Publishers Association's Platinum Prize (1998), and the Prime Minister's Prize (2002).

Political activism

Amir has frequently called for social justice and denounced what he has described as the deterioration of the Israeli welfare state. In 2007, when his book Jasmine was published in Arabic in Egypt, he expressed hope that more Israeli books be spread in the Arab world, saying "How can there be peace without us knowing each other?". He repeated that statement in a literary soiree held by the Israeli Embassy in Cairo. He also signed a petition calling for Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Olmert to negotiate a cease-fire with Hamas. In 2006, when President of Israel Moshe Katsav was indicted with rape, several Israeli websites suggested Amir as a successor. Amir told Maariv that he would seriously consider such an offer.

In Hebrew

  • Tarnegol Kaparot ("Scapegoat"), Am Oved, 1984
  • Mafriah Ha-Yonim ("Farewell, Baghdad") Am Oved, 1992
  • Ahavat Shaul ("Saul's Love"), Am Oved, 1998
  • Yasmin ("Jasmine"), Am Oved, 2005
  • Translated into English

  • Amir, Eli (1987). Scapegoat: A Novel. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 218. 
  • Amir, Eli (2010). The Dove Flyer. Halban Publishers. p. 544. 
  • Amir, Eli (2012). Yasmine. Halban Publishers. p. 436. 
  • References

    Eli Amir Wikipedia