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Nowhere Outside of History
by Erica Weitzman
October 2003
Oz Shelach, Picnic Grounds: A Novel in Fragments (City Lights Books, 2003)
On the night of April 9th, 1948, the infamous Jewish paramilitary groups Irgun and the Stern Gang surrounded the tiny Arab village of Deir Yasin, five kilometers to the west of Jerusalem. After issuing a brief warning to evacuate, the paramilitaries led by future Israeli president Menachim Begin proceeded to sweep the village, massacring 254 of the villages 700 inhabitants, mostly older men, women, and children. Those who survived either fled or were taken captive and paraded as war spoils through Jerusalem. Twenty-five years later, a former army colonel and eyewitness would make a public admission in the Israeli newspaper Yediot Ahronot: "The Irgun and LEHI men came out of hiding and began to clean the houses. They shot whoever they saw, women and children included, [and] the commanders did not try to stop the massacre."
Now an Israeli settlement, Deir Yasin has become one of the most potent symbols of what Palestinians call Al-Nakhba "The Catastrophe" the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from their lands and the foundation of the state of Israel. It is here, at Deir Yasin, that Israeli author Oz Shelach begins his debut novel, Picnic Grounds: A Novel in Fragments. In the first "fragment" of the novel, a history professor has taken his family to the site for a picnic outing. Told in Shelachs understated, almost journalistic prose, the scene is utterly banal. Banal, that is, until one understands that the real story is in what has been left out, the words not said, the names no longer mentioned: "The professor did not talk of the village, origin of the stones. He did not talk of the village school, now a psychiatric hospital, on the other side of the hill. He imagined that he and his family were having a picnic, unrelated to the village, enjoying its grounds outside of history."
A collection of vignettes or snapshots more than a true narrative, Shelachs book is also a picture of a society desperately trying to live outside of history, to disastrous effect. Shelachs Israel is a society overloaded with small ironies and absurdities, with blind spots so large they threaten to blot out the entire view. One section, laconically titled "Participation," relates the following story:
In Tel-Aviv, a random group of psychology students, who are required to participate in three or four so-called experiments every semester, were asked to imagine the whole city bare, to strip it down in their minds eye to what it was, or could be. All the students envisioned a big emptiness. They saw streets and buildings, or wide stretches of sand and low bush and a few streams flowing into the sea, some saw ruins. Not one participant in the experiment mentioned humans.
The "good guide" to Jerusalem, another section deadpans, "doesnt touch on what we all know."
Everything, in Picnic Grounds, carries a double valence. Even the most innocent-seeming objects a forest spring, the octagonal classrooms of Hebrew University take on a vaguely sinister symbolic weight. News of bombings back home breaks through exotic vacations to India and Spain. The relentless modernness of Israel coexists uneasily with its mythologized ancient past; the banality of daily life is compromised by the awareness of the violence upon which it is built. From time to time a remnant of the lands Palestinian heritage crops up through the Israeli overgrowth, which sprawls like the huge, ecosystem-damaging pine trees the government plants throughout the country. In one fragment, an army officer, responding to a forest fire caused by these overzealous pines, comments that "the trees had done their job, it was now property developers time."
Shelach documents a world in which violence is at once ubiquitous and unspoken, or spoken so often that it loses force and becomes almost ordinary, just one more part of the landscape. But the greatest and the most unspoken violence is not that which is suffered by the people that appear in Shelachs novel. Rather, it is the violence that has been imposed in their name, and with their conscious or unconscious complicity.
Only rarely does Shelachs writing approach anything like high rhetoric, as in the following passage, from the end of "Tea Outdoors"
They drank carefully, in little sips, like ghosts that haunt the soil, which is soaked with blood, where vines stretch out over ruins and persist like the claims big sweet green grapes, rich in seeds, tall fig trees of the farmers we drove away.
but these rare flashes of rage are directions for how the novel should be read: as a portrait of a people in denial of their own history, a people whose country was built on a foundation of murder and theft, and who know it, but cannot bring themselves to renounce their spoils. According to Menachem Begin, "The massacre [at Deir Yasin] was not only justified, but there would not have been a state of Israel without [it]." The characters of Picnic Grounds suffer from the knowledge that they owe their existence to past and present injustices, that even the words they use are suspect, and that the normalcy of their lives is only a fake normalcy at best.
At a recent reading in Brooklyn, Shelach who now lives in New York refused to become any sort of spokesman or political analyst, protesting that he had written a work of art and ambiguity, not commentary or taking sides. "Long orderly texts belong in the 19th-century shelves," declaims one character. "Today, there are only short stories." But for all its apparent modesty, Shelachs slip of a novel is as bitter, sad, and angry a work as any of the great epics of war. Like its title, Picnic Grounds seems gentle, but what emerges is a tragic portrait of historical violence and its erasure in the collective memory.
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The Rail invites you to a reading with Jason
Flores-Williams and Brian Carreira, along with musical
guest Steve Strunsky of the Lonesome Prairie Dogs.
Thurs., Sept. 22, 8:30 p.m.
Vox Pop--Flatbush, Brooklyn
www.voxpop.net
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OFF THE RAIL FALL 2005 at the Central Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library - Grand Army Plaza
(718) 230-2100 in the 2nd Floor Auditorium
Tuesday, Sept. 13 from 7 till 9
John Ashbery
Leslie Scalapino
Tuesday, Oct. 18 from 7 till 9
Kenneth Bernard
Lynda Schor
Tuesday, Nov. 15 from 7 till 9
Diane Williams
Christine Schutt
Curated and hosted by the Rail's Fiction Editor Donald Breckenridge
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The Independent Press Association-NY recently honored The Brooklyn Rail with the following awards:
1st place: Best article about Immigrant Issues or Racial Justice--Gabriel Thompson, "One Immigrant's Journey" (September 2004).
1st place: Best article about the Arts*--Amy Zimmer, "The Brownsville Rec. Center" (April 04)
2nd place: Best article about the Arts--Brian Carreira, "Harlem Arts: A Faux Renaissance" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
2nd place: Best editorial or commentary--T. Hamm, "The Issue is Free Speech" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
3rd Place: Best Investigative News Story--Marjory Garrison, "Minimum Matter of Survival" (May 04)
Honorable mention: Best Investigative News Story--Williams Cole, "Housing vs. the RNC" (June 04).
Honorable mention: Best Original Feature--Yvette Walton, "My Life in the NYPD" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
Come to the Brooklyn Waterfront Festival.
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