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PANIM- Faces of Art and Culture in Israel - March-April 1996 |
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Panim: Faces of Art and Culture in Israel
March-April 1996
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COVER STORY
Rina Yerushalmi's Vayomer: The Bible
Reinterpreted
Throughout the ages, one of the most powerful and provocative sources of
artistic inspiration has been the Bible. Whether painters, poets,
choreographers or playwrights, artists have long tapped the wealth of raw
material found in the stories, texts and characters of the holy
scriptures. In her latest project, Vayomer, director Rina Yerushalmi
and
her Itim Theater Ensemble-Cameri Theater, inject contemporary theater,
movement and music into a selection of texts from the Old Testament, the
outcome being a new and unique perspective on the old and familiar. "In a
country and world increasingly polarized between religious and secular
attitudes of life, this project is more than timely," writes Yerushalmi.
Her goal is to return to the source, to the origins of our intellectual
concepts and history, and to renew a dialogue with the past and the
future.
The
ensemble began work on the project at the end of 1994. The segments
were chosen by the actors and director who were looking for new ways to
connect with the biblical texts. What impressed them most were the
incredible rhythms and images, the expressiveness and conciseness of the
ancient Hebrew - a gift for actors whose craft is tied so closely to
language.
The piece
is composed of four parts, Vayomer ("And He Spoke"), Vayelech
("And He Went"), Vayishtachavu ("And They Bowed Down") and
Vayerah ("And
He Appeared"), expecting to run about six hours when performed in their
entirety. Although the segments are arranged according to themes,
associations and compositional values, there is a definite progression in
the show that begins with the creation of the world - from nothingness to
essence - and the establishment of the laws. The temptation of Eve, the
sacrifice of Isaac, Cain and Abel, Noah and the flood, the Ten
Commandments and dietary laws are some of the segments in the first part.
The second part deals with the formation of the nation of Israel, the
covenant between man and God and reaching the promised land; in the third
part, the nation anoints a king, an earthly god to bow down to and follow
into war; the last section, Vayerah, addresses the relationship between
God and man through the Prophets and their revelations. Yerushalmi notes,
"There is no attempt to dramatize the text into a play form, but to allow
it to create its own genre of theatrical experience."
The production, sponsored by the Israel Festival-Jerusalem, is designed to
be an intimate experience, taking place in an open space with no
separation between stage and audience. The 15 actors are interspersed
among the viewers, rising to partake in their sequences and then returning
to their seats. This is the fourth project undertaken by Itim, an ensemble
known for the long gestation period of its productions and its innovative
interpretations of such classics as Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet
and, now, the Old Testament. Vayomer will participate in the 1996
Israel Festival (June 5-6). It will also be performed at festivals in
Vienna (May 14-16) and Hamburg (August 17-22).
SPOTLIGHT
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Batya Gur: A Writer Who's Dunnit (again and again)
Batya Gur woke up and decided she
wanted to be a writer. And that
is exactly what she did. A late-bloomer at 39, Gur popularized the
detective genre in the Israeli literary canon and has become one of
Israel's bestselling novelists abroad. All of her three mysteries (a
fourth just came out in Hebrew) have made it on to the New York Times'
annual Notable Book List, an impressive feat for any writer, not to
mention a foreigner and a whodunit novice to boot. Her books have been
translated into French, German (she won Germany's Crimi Prize), Italian,
Dutch and Japanese.
But her success is first and foremost local. Her books -- all of them
bestsellers -- are snatched up like popcorn in a movie theater -- a fact
that leaves her not a little bit uncomfortable. Painfully shy, Gur, now
48, fidgets in her chair at a crowded Jerusalem cafe as if she were
waiting to have a tooth extracted.
"I hate being asked personal questions," says Gur, a trim, measured woman
with striking green eyes and pale blonde hair. She stoically succumbs. Gur
only began writing nine years ago when she suddenly became tired of
teaching high school and fed up with working on her master's thesis on the
Israeli poet Natan Zach. She launched her writing career with a detective
novel because, says this serious-minded former literary scholar, it's the
least presumptuous genre. "If I failed, nobody would notice," she
explains, her assured tones not totally masking the layers of
self-doubt.
Gur's murders take place in self-contained insular societies -- the
Jerusalem Psychoanalytic Institute ("The Saturday Morning Murder," 1988),
Hebrew University's literature department ("Literary Murder," 1991) and a
kibbutz, the paradigm of Israeli idealism and intrigue ("Murder on a
Kibbutz," 1991). In her fourth novel, Gur ventures into the world of
musicians.
To solve the murders, Gur introduces readers to Inspector Michael Ohayon,
Israel's first home-grown detective and, in what seems to be a bid for
anonymity, her polar opposite. He is, well, male. He is divorced, she is
married. He is the son of Moroccan immigrants; she is the daughter of
Holocaust survivors. A shrewd observer of the human condition, Ohayon
solves his cases by getting into the suspects' shoes -- "It's only when I
identify with someone that I know which way to go."
For Gur, the appearance of the detective genre is a symptom of a nation's
maturity. "Totally realistic in an unrealistic way, it is a serious genre
in that it is so ironic," says Gur. "I think we've become grown-up enough
to take a look at ourselves through this finely-tuned microscopic
lens."
After completing her third mystery, Gur took an imaginative leap of faith
and wrote Lo kach tiarti li ("I Didn't Imagine It Like This"), a novel
(due out in English in November) with no crime or suspects and whose main
character is a female gynecologist.
Gur lights one cigarette after another. So do many of her characters, a
rather dated scenario in these health-conscious times. "I am rather
anachronistic, anyway," Gur offers between puffs, bending just an iota, "I
am also old-fashioned; I like to have a door opened for me and enjoy being
helped on with my coat. And" -- she now takes a deep breath -- "I hate the
politics of feminism." A rather curious statement for a woman who has
achieved so much. She gets up at 6:30, exercises at a local gym and is at
her computer by 8:30. Aside from writing novels, Gur -- a voracious reader
-- has a weekly book review column in the Hebrew daily Ha'aretz and
teaches creative writing twice a week at the Jerusalem Film and Television
School. She avoids TV and the social literary scene and enjoys cooking,
classical music and the beach. And, naturally, she finds time for her
children -- two boys and a girl, ages 18, 16, and 11.
How does she do it? Gur shrugs. "I don't know; it does sound impressive
when you put it on paper," she admits, looking at her watch. "Oh dear, I
really must go," she apologizes and in an unintentional nod to Lewis
Carroll, hurries off to her next appointment.
- Shelley Kleiman
SHALOM-SALAAM
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Ruth Zarfati
Yossi Asher
Dan Kedar
Menashe Kadishman
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"Artists - Messengers of Peace:" One Family, Two Exhibits and
Lots of Goodwill
How does a well-known Israeli industrialist family, scientists at that,
become art patrons and sponsors of projects combining peace and art? For
the Fischers, it came from an act of charity.
It all began 17 years ago when an Israeli stamp collector sent out 100
first-day covers issued by the Israeli Philatelic Service, commemorating
the first day of peace between Israel and Egypt, to 100 Israeli artists.
87 returned adorned with the individual artistic visions of some of
Israel's finest artists. This marked the birth of the first "Artists -
Messengers of Peace" exhibit, perhaps the most comprehensive collection of
works by Israeli artists ever assembled. The stamp collector donated the
collection, which includes pieces by Moshe Kupferman, Lea Nikel, Menashe
Kadishman and Ivan Schwebel, to "LIBI," the fund-raising organization for
the welfare of Israeli soldiers. The collection was put up for auction 12
years ago.
Enter Dr. Eli Fischer, founder and president of Dr. Fischer Laboratories,
one of Israel's leading skincare companies. The Fischer family purchased
the entire collection as their donation to "LIBI" and displayed it in
their Tel Aviv home until 1994. That was the year officially designated by
the Ministry of Education as the "Year of Peace." For the occasion, the
collection was moved to the Eretz Israel Museum where it hung for the
year, accompanied by workshops on peace given by the museum to school
children.
The Fischers felt the next natural step was to send the exhibit abroad.
They turned to exhibit producer Doron Polak for assistance in reaching
appropriate venues in the United States. As a result, "Artists -
Messengers of Peace" opens at New York's Hebrew Union College gallery at
the beginning of March. From there it will move among Jewish museums in
Chicago, Washington DC, Los Angeles, Berkeley and Miami. Arrangements are
also being made to display the exhibit in South America - Chile, Brazil,
Argentina and Venezuela.
With the signing of the peace treaty with Jordan, the Fischers decided to
continue the tradition and purchased first-day covers, sending them out
once again to leading artists in Israel and abroad. This time, interested
artists also contacted the Fischers, asking to participate in the
project.
The resulting collection, sponsored entirely by the Fischer family,
currently stands at 140 pieces, with additional works arriving daily.
Among the artists included in this collection are Nachum Tevet, Yehoshua
Neustein, Ido Bar-El, Dorit Yaakobi, Yair Garbuz, the Abu Shakra brothers,
Agnes Dennis (NY), Vulto (Holland), V.V. Anger (Australia), Helena Beriolo
(Italy) and Jenny Marketo (Greece).
Eventually, the producers plan on creating two traveling exhibits, each
comprised half of the Egypt and half of the Jordan works. Comparing the
two collections, Polak notes some significant differences between them. He
describes the earlier Egypt exhibit as "optimistic," "euphoric," and
"poetic." The artists used bright colors and traditional symbols of peace
such as the dove and the olive branch. The much larger Jordan collection,
on the other hand, expresses hints of apprehension and suspicion regarding
the peace process in general. Instead of overwhelming color, black appears
more frequently along with symbols marking the reality of co-existence -
maps and topography, the intifada, the territories, dialogue and
communication and historical elements. This time, Arab artists also
contributed to the collection. The envelopes each carry their own story,
adding to the rich weave of politics and art.
The Fischers' crossover from industrialists to avid patrons of Israeli art
continues with yet another project involving local artists and the subject
of peace. They are building a non-profit art gallery at their new factory
in Netanya which is scheduled to be ready within the next three years. In
the meantime, Devorah and Eli Fischer spend their Fridays going from
gallery to gallery in search of pieces for their fledgling collection. The
subject of the gallery which will be open to the public will be "the art
of peace."
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Zehava Ben Brings the Songs of Um Kulthum to Life
She is
Israeli, of Moroccan heritage, brought up in a poor neighborhood in
the southern city of Beersheba. Her humble origins, petite build and
bashful demeanor mask an extraordinary talent. She is Zehava Ben, the
singer whose mesmerizing voice now wraps itself around the revered songs
of the late great Egyptian singer, Um Kulthum. Ben, backed by the 24-piece
Haifa Arab Orchestra conducted by Suhil Raduan, wins over even the most
fanatic Um Kulthum fans with her interpretations of such classic and
complex songs as El-atlall and Inta Oumri, songs that she recalls her
father listening to in her youth. Ben does not speak Arabic so her
preparations for the show entailed work with a language expert and
musicologist who helped her capture the poetic nuances in the phrasing and
intonation.
Ben first unveiled her unique program at the Jaffa Peace Festival and
performed it in Jericho during the recent Ramadan holiday. The Palestinian
Ministry of Culture has also given the green light for Ben to perform in
Gaza at some point in the future. It is her dream to perform one day at
Cairo's famed opera house. Enthusiasm for Ben's program is spreading
quickly and she and the orchestra have been invited to a number of
festivals this summer in Europe and Scandinavia including Stockholm (June
12), Montpellier (July 5) and the Sfinks Festival (Boechout, Belgium; July
27).
To this day, Um Kulthum's music can be heard across the length and breadth
of the Arab world. Reinterpreting her music is Ben's gift to an evolving
region. "I hope my songs will be a bridge of peace," she says.
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Between the Walls of Acre, the Sounds of Diwan Ring
Out
The Diwan is part of Arab folklore, a gathering or assembly, usually in
an open courtyard, for the purpose of listening to folk tales, singing and
dancing. In Acre, a town with a mixed Jewish and Arab population, when
people mention Diwan, today they are most likely referring to a unique
musical ensemble that sprouted out of the Acre Theater Center. Founded in
1987 by Moni Yosef, an actor and director at the theater, Diwan has
evolved from a theatrical storytelling experience tracing the rich 5,000
year history of the sea port town into an Arab-Jewish musical
happening.
When the group first participated in the Acre Fringe Theater Festival in
1993, the four-five hour program, described as a "social-theatrical
event," included a tour of the old city of Acre in order to acquaint the
audience with the Arab lifestyle through hospitality in the artists'
homes, a meal of hummus and, finally, through the Diwan experience
itself.
At the 1995 festival, the group of ten musicians (six Arab and four
Jewish), a singer and a pair of Sufi dancers, presented "Between the
Walls," a concert based upon poems written in the old city of Acre. Ori
Vidislavsky, musical director of Diwan, notes, "...to create an encounter
between east and west is artificial. One can't create it because it's
(already) there. This is our reality in Israel now and all we have left is
to listen to (it)." The result is a show of songs in Arabic, mostly
composed by Gazi Abu Baker and sung by Acre native Sahar Fody. The songs
express nostalgia and longing for the past and the old way of life, and
also hope for the future as in the timely "Despite the Tiredness:"
"Despite the tiredness and fate
The sea is still blus.
Despite the pain and the forgotten
The sun still shines...
However deep the darkness may live
In our brave and beautiful homeland
Morning will arrive
After the night."
Lyrics by Gazi Abu Baker
(translated from Arabic)
Diwan has been invited to ethnic festivals and events in Switzerland and
Germany and will be performing "Between the Walls" in Britain (London and Brighton) in May.
FILM
A Bounty of Retrospectives for Jerusalem Film School
Between now and 1997, seven retrospectives of student films from the
Jerusalem Film and Television School are scheduled. Starting with the
Krakow Film Festival this May, retrospectives will also be held at the St.
Petersburg Film Festival in June, at three festivals in Spain (Huesca,
6/96; Valencia, 7/96; Valladolid 10/96) and at the Chicago Film Festival
in October. Plans are already firm for a retrospective at the Mexico City
Film Festival in August, 1997.
Israel Film Archive/Jerusalem Cinematheque to Host FIFA Conference
For the first time in Israel's history, the International Federation of
Film Archives (FIFA) will hold its annual conference in Jerusalem. Over 80
film archives will be represented by 150 participants from 60 countries.
During the ten-day conference in April, discussions will be held on
subjects ranging from archive copyrights to film restoration as a metaphor
for a cultural renaissance. Federation officials have invited
representatives from Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Lebanon, Egypt, Syria and
Cyprus - countries currently in early stages of establishing their own
national film archives. The Israel Film Archive, directed by Lia Van Leer
and located at the Jerusalem Cinematheque, has been a member of FIFA since
1960.
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New Films Released:
"Saint Clara" (Clara hakdosha):
Clara is
a bright, new Russian student whose supernatural powers come to
light when all her seventh grade classmates get "A's" on their math exams.
Clara claims that the exam questions were revealed to her in a dream. This
leads Tikel and Rosenthal, the class leaders, to plot other ways to use
Clara's powers in school, each falling in love with her in the process.
Young love and the supernatural blend in this directorial debut by Uri
Sivan and Ari Fulman. The film won first prize at the 1995 Haifa Film
Festival and was screened to packed houses in the Panorama segment of the
Berlin International Film Festival. Commercial distribution rights have
already been sold in Japan, the United States, the Czech Republic and
Mexico. Produced by Marek Rozenbaum and Uri Sabag.
"White Night" (Laila lavan):
Based on
Shlomo Kfir's short story, "Charlie is Clean," this is the story
of two prisoners, Charlie and Shlomo. Shlomo helps Charlie, the prison
"boss," kick his drug addiction. In spite of harsh prison conditions and
their vastly different social and ideological backgrounds, an unexpected
friendship develops between the two. Charlie's path to rehabilitation
becomes a spiritual as well as a physical one, filled with pain, failure
and success. The film was shot mostly inside an Israeli prison with the
participation of real prisoners. Directed and produced by Arnon Zadok.
MUSIC
New TV Series on the History of Israeli Rock
Israel Television has commissioned a series on the history of Israeli
rock. The series of 12 40-minute episodes will examine the evolution of
Israeli rock over the past 30 years, from the glory days of the army
groups, through the pop music of groups like Mashina to enfant terrible
Aviv Gefen. Music critic Yoav Kutner will be the in-house expert and chief
editor of the program. The cinematic format will include Kutner's
interviews with leading rock personalities and will present the subject in
terms of domestic and international contexts. The series is scheduled to
air by the end of 1997, in time for Israel's 50th anniversary
celebrations.
THEATER
Sobol's "Ghetto" a Hit in Japan
Capturing three first places (out of a possible five) at Japan's most
prestigious annual theater awards, the Yomiyuri Theater Prize, Joshua
Sobol's play "Ghetto," was the big winner for 1995. The Japanese
production of the play was unanimously singled out as the best play of the
year and also won the awards for best direction and stage design. Both the
director and the stage designer credit the powerful play for their
inspiration and success. The play also won two additional awards: the
Mainichi Newspaper Award for best director and the Kinokuniya Literary
Prize for best actor. "Ghetto" played in Kobe and Tokyo. In light of the
play's success, its producers are planning to present it again in Japan in
two to three years' time.
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DANCE
Israeli Dance Company and British Chroeographer Team Up as Part of BI
ARTS
Collaboration between British choreographer Paul Norton, cutting edge
British composer Fred Firth and the Batsheva Dance Company resulted in The
Rogue Tool which the company debuted in February. Invited to Israel
through the British Israeli Arts Training Scheme (BI ARTS), Norton, a
former medical student turned choreographer, worked with the Batsheva
dancers in a special workshop that culminated in the creation of Tool.
Norton's movements reflect an anatomically analytical style undoubtedly
influenced by his earlier medical studies. Firth also came to Israel as
part of the project and conducted a master class with Israeli musicians.
Established and sponsored by the British Council, the Foreign Ministry's
Division of Cultural and Scientific Affairs and the National Council for
Culture and Art, BI ARTS provides training for Israeli and British artists
in all fields through the exchange of expertise and experience available
in the two countries.
EVENTS
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Gesher Theater's "Village:" There's no place like home
The years
are 1940 to 1947. Palestine is populated by the pre-state
veteran Jewish community, local Arabs, recent Jewish immigrants and
Holocaust survivors, British soldiers and Italian prisoners of war. Rommel
is on the verge of victory in Egypt, at El Alamein; the Holocaust is
ravaging Europe; and the Haganah (the precursor to the Israeli army) is
training young Jewish troops in preparation for the battle for survival.
Amidst these tumultuous times - within the big circle of world events -
hides a village somewhere in Palestine whose residents are just trying to
live out their daily lives in their small corner of the universe.
"Village" (Kfar) is their stories, their loves and fears, pains and
disappointments, as remembered fondly through the eyes of Yossi, an
eternal boy. Joshua Sobol, the playwright, describes his play as "a ballad
on the end of innocence."
As the play begins, Yossi has become a grave digger in the village
cemetery where all the dear figures of his youth are buried. He introduces
the audience to his insulated world where his memories reign, untroubled
by reality. He recalls his friends and family through his personal prism
of naivete and purity. There is the village doctor whose wife, Clara,
openly flirts with a British officer and who, himself, is in love with the
beautiful Sonia, a Holocaust survivor. There is Yossi's socialist
grandmother, Leah, who constantly quotes Lenin and imparts a political
education to Sa'id, a local Arab merchant. His brother Ami, so brave and
fearless, joins the fledgling Haganah. But most of all there are
Dassi and
Ditza. Dassi escapes her parents' complicated relationship for Yossi's
simple, childlike charm. Ditza is the family goat who, in life and in
spirit, is Yossi's confidante, particularly on the one subject that
troubles him most, death.
Written by Sobol especially for the Gesher ("Bridge") Theater, "Village"
was inspired by the playwright's own childhood and the people who were
once part of his life. Directed by Yevgeny Arye, the three-hour production
comes to life amidst the impressive stage design of Alexander Lisiyansky.
A revolving wooden walkway, reminiscent of a baggage carousel, carries the
play's characters through their world - a combination of wheat fields and
furnishings from the old country - invoking the cycle of life and its
transience.
Already recognized as one of Israel's leading theater companies, the
Gesher Theater was established five years ago by a group of new immigrant
Russian actors and their director, Arye. The troupe performs in Russian -
and now in Hebrew, as well. "Village" is their first original Israeli
production, one they are uniquely suited to tackle as most of them have
first-hand knowledge of the new immigrant experience. Beyond that, the
play also gives them an opportunity to connect to Israel's history and
reality. Though very different from their own, it is now theirs
nonetheless.
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Roy Horovitz in "My First
Sony"
Tahal Ran in "Where's
Ruti?"
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Teatronetto: Monodramas and more monodramas
Veteran actors, recent immigrants, even an Israel Prize-winning dance
pioneer, were among the presenters at this year's Teatronetto Festival.
Ten monodramas, selected from the 100 submissions, competed for the NIS
10,000 prize at the seventh annual celebration of solo theater held at the
Suzanne Dellal Center in Tel Aviv. Much of the material drew on Hebrew
literature or were personal pieces written and performed by the actors. "A
Jew in Darkness" (Yehudi Bahoshech) with Shmuel Viloszny tells of a
Spanish priest in 1485 whose confession of his Jewish heritage and
forbidden love is heard, unbeknownst to him, by an inquisitor; In Benny
Barbash's "My First Sony," a family's breakup is witnessed from the point
of view of a child who obsessively tapes the goings-on with his tape
recorder; Tahal Ran's "Where's Ruti" explores the effects of sexual abuse
on a young girl. And the winner is..... "A Jew in Darkness."
CULTURE BRIEFS
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Jerusalem: The theme for a series of exhibits at the Israel
Museum
"Ten
measures of beauty were given to the world - nine to Jerusalem, and
one to all the rest." This statement from the Talmud expresses the
singular place Jerusalem has held in the hearts and minds of people
throughout history. It is also the source of inspiration for a new exhibit
by children from around the world at the Israel Museum from the end of
March until the beginning of May. 500 drawings made by children ages 6-15
from 65 countries comprise "Children of
the World Draw Jerusalem at 3000,"
the culmination of art contests organized by Israel's missions abroad.
Hailing from such diverse cultures as Indonesia, Zaire, Nepal, the Fiji
Islands, Bolivia, China and the United States, the children depict
Jerusalem, a place most have never actually seen, by exploring the far
reaches of their imaginations: a city of universal peace, of dreams and
symbols. Only a child's mind can attribute the best of their own heritage
to the ideal of Jerusalem. Chinese landscapes, Greek architecture, crosses
on Bolivian mountains all find a seemingly natural place in their
visions.
A panel of judges selected 12 outstanding works from the large collection
and invited their young creators to come to Israel for a week-long
encounter with 18 Israeli children whose works were also singled out. The
project was initiated by the Ministry of Education and Culture and carried
out with the cooperation of the Foreign Ministry, the Ministry of Tourism
and El Al Airlines, among others.
A dozen other exhibits on Jerusalem will fill the Israel Museum during the
same period. Among the exhibits are archeological renditions of King
David; 15th century European forgeries of ancient shekels; Jerusalem, as
viewed by Israeli artists; the recreation of a typical,
turn-of-the-century Old City market scene featuring the distinctive
costumes of the various townspeople; 15th-18th century prints and drawings
by the likes of Dürer, Mantegna and Rembrandt, featuring Jerusalem as the
backdrop to biblical stories; a collection of travelogues - journals and
diaries from pilgrims, clergymen, scholars, artists, officers and
adventurers exploring Jerusalem throughout the centuries; and paintings of
Jerusalem views by one of the city's noted artists, Anna Ticho
(1894-1980).
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