October 2, 2015

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Volume XXI, Issue XVIII  |  www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts

SENIORS

19 Tishri 5776 | October 2, 2015

6

PHOTO | JEWISH ALLIANCE OF GREATER R.I.

Got kids for the day?

favorite fall activities for young and old

W

BY FRAN OSTENDORF fostendorf@jewishallianceri.org

hen there are children around and it’s time to have some fun, we’ve got the list for you. Are the grandkids in town? Do your kids have some free time? Fall is a perfect time for outdoor activities. Then, the weather turns and what do you do? Our area has a wealth of things that can be enjoyed by all ages. You may want to try a few of these on your own – no children needed! ACTIVITIES | 15

PHOTO | COURTESY ROGER WILLIAMS PARK ZOO

Sukkot around town

If you don’t have a sukkah in your yard, you’ve seen one at the synagogue or perhaps in your neighbor’s yard. Even Roger Williams Park Zoo has a sukkah for the holiday. It’s located across from the Meller-Danforth Education Center. We’re interested in what your sukkah looks like. Send us a photo, and we might just run it in The Voice (be sure to include your name and contact information).

Seven Israeli expat writers to watch BY BETH KISSILEFF JTA – Israelis get around the globe, as anyone who has traveled to Thailand, Goa or Patagonia knows. Writers, too, are known for living outside the lands of their birth – Czech-born Milan Kundera lives in Paris and writes in French; Jhumpa Lahiri moved to Rome in 2012 and wrote her fi rst book in Italian earlier this year, and last year Arab-Israeli writer Sayed

Kashua decamped to Champaign, Illinois, and continues to write in his adopted tongue, Hebrew. So perhaps it comes as no surprise that there’s no shortage of Israeli writers who have made their homes in various corners of the globe. Some have adopted the language of their resident country and choose to write in it; others continue to write in Hebrew.

The proliferation of Israeli writers living abroad hasn’t been without controversy: in January, Israel’s top literary award, the Sapir Prize, was awarded to Reuven Namdar, an Israeli who resides in New York. He was the fi rst writer living outside Israel to receive it, and in the aftermath of his victory Israel passed a new law restricting the prize to writers living in Israel full time.

Though the number of Hebrew authors living abroad and writing prizeworthy books may be small, their work begs the question of whether or not Israeli culture can have global reach. Here are some snapshots of Israeli writers worth following around the world:

WRITERS | 23

Sayed Kashua

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