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Agnon Speaks
For my bar mitzvah, I got a set of all of Agnon's books published up to then. I was totally absorbed by the style and characters of his books. I even tried my hand at imitating his style by writing -- at the age of 14 -- a short story totally inspired by the Agnon stories I had read. I went further -- I mailed him a copy of my story. Weeks and weeks passed. Finally a handwritten letter came to me at my home in Sweden from Talpyiot -- Agnon's home -- part written by his wife, Esther, and part by him. They both encouraged me to come to Eretz Yisrael and continue writing there … All this happened in 1936. Ten years later, my late brother Gabriel, who had made aliyah, was standing in line to board a bus in Jerusalem, when who was standing in front of him but Agnon. They entered into a conversation. When Agnon heard that my brother was from Sweden, he said, "You know, ten years ago, I received a letter from a young boy in Sweden …" Of course he was referring to me, and when I heard about the conversation, I was rightfully happy. In 1964, when Agnon received the coveted Nobel Prize in literature, I was invited by the Swedish authorities to attend the festivities, but to my everlasting regret, I could not take advantage of the invitation to the celebration, which turned out to be a real Kiddush Hashem (Sanctification of G-d's Name) … A new book has been published with a large number of quotations from Agnon's various books and other writings. These pearls of wisdom and Jewish insights are worth making widely known. I therefore have selected and translated from Hebrew a number of them, which I hope my readers will enjoy:
"A Jew must always consider that he is only one on earth and that there is no one else like him. Because if there already would be someone like him, why was there any need for him to be born? Thus every Jew must contribute something unique and new to the world. He must correct things that need correction, until all worlds have been corrected and Mashiach can come soon."These few quotations, taken out of Agnon's many novels and short stories, prove his genuinely Jewish genius for producing words of wisdom, humility, piety, and true commitment to Torah that no other novelist in the world has been able to equal. Agnon's precious book, Yamim Noraim, an anthology of sayings related to the High Holidays that our great sages of yore left behind, has accompanied most of us through the most solemn holidays of the year. The fiction Agnon wrote was thus only the outer shell of his literary genius. His real genius is found in his own personal character and attitude to Judaism and to the ideal life and attitude of a Jew. Agnon's writings will live on forever. They are the finest productions of the Jewish mind. [ HOME ] [ BIOGRAPHY ] [ ARTICLES ] [ BOOKS ] [ LECTURES ]
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