The Times of Israel reports:
Although a work of fiction, Eliette Abecassis’s new book “Alyah” reads like a pamphlet against the rise of anti-Semitism. Published in France mid-May and written in reaction to the January attacks against Paris magazine Charlie Hebdo and kosher supermarket, the book is a heart-felt cry that has kept French media buzzing.
“A few years ago I would go out on the street
wearing a Star of David around my neck. I was proud to be named Esther
Vidal, and I would never lower my voice to say my name. We were not in
danger in the city, nor attacked in front of a school, a synagogue, or
in the privacy of our home. Calling someone a ‘dirty Jew’ was taboo.
“I never thought it would be possible to see
anti-Semitic riots in Paris. In truth, I never imagined that I would
hear the words ‘Death to Jews’ at a demonstration,” Abecassis writes in
“Alyah.” In “Alyah,” Abecassis tells the story of
Esther Vidal, a Jewish woman of Moroccan descent living in Paris. Caught
between her love for France and the temptation to move to Israel, the
character’s dilemma echoes Abecassis’s fears for the future.
A best-selling novelist and philosophy
teacher, Abecassis was born in Strasbourg to a Sefaradi family. “Alyah”
is not the first time she has addressed Jewish issues via literature:
Her 2000 novel “La Répudiée” was the inspiration for Amos Gitai’s film
“Kaddosh.” A decade later, she published “Et te voici
permise à tout homme” (“You are hereby permitted to all men”), which
tells the story of Anna, a young Parisian mother who struggles to obtain
the get – the Jewish decree of divorce – from her ex-husband.
Just ahead her new novel’s release, Abecassis
sat in a Paris café with The Times of Israel and discussed her desire to
one day move to Israel.
Why did you write this book?
It took me six months to complete it. I’ve
never written a book so quickly in my life. A sense of urgency dictated
it. I first felt the need to write about aliyah (immigration to Israel)
last summer, because Europe’s old demon surfaced once again. There was a
wave of pro-Palestinian rallies in the streets of Paris, which turned
into anti-Semitic marches. People yelled unashamedly “Gas the Jews” and
“Death to Jews.” [...]
In this book, do you encourage French Jews to make aliyah? Are you thinking about moving?
Everyone should be making this decision for
oneself. I cannot tell people what to do with their lives. We all have
different ideals and aspirations for the future. Leaving a country is
not a random decision.
I’m definitely thinking about moving to Israel. The question is no longer “if” I want to make aliyah, but “when.” [...]
You also wrote about the Republican marches that gathered
millions of people in the streets of France, on January 11. The French
media said that the Paris rally gathered more people than the liberation
of Paris at the end of World War II. Did this day make you feel better
about the situation?
I’m quite divided about this rally. It was a
wonderful thing to see. But at the same time, it was a big, tight slap
in the face for the French Jewish community. I couldn’t help but ask
myself, “Would all these people have gone out on the streets if only
Jews had been killed in January?” Unfortunately, I don’t think so.
In a way, does it suggest that killing Jews is
not as revolting and scandalous as killing Charlie Hebdo cartoonists?
Aren’t Jews considered “real” French people? The answers to these
questions tend to depress me and to make me sad.
Where were all these people demonstrating on
the streets when Ilan Halimi was brutally murdered for being a Jew?
Where were they when school kids and their father were the victims of
Islamist terror in a Toulouse school? This is the kind of questions that
keeps me up at night sometimes. More.
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