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Sarah Blau (Hebrew: שהרה בלאו; born May 17, 1973) is an Israeli author and playwright. She won the Levi Eshkol's Prize for Hebrew Literature in 2015.,[1] and the 2017 Bar-Ilan University Alumni Achievement Award.

Sarah Blau
Sarah Blau

Biography


Blau was born in Bnei Brak (a religious city which appears frequently in her work), the oldest daughter of modern orthodox religious family. She is considered a prominent voice in religious Israeli literature, and identifies herself as ‘religious-lite.’ She served as editor and presenter on various television and radio shows that focus on Jewish topics from an original, feminist perspective and also hosted a weekly TV show in which she discussed biblical figures with children. Single and childfree, she was quoted as saying, "I wrote an entire thriller to understand why it works for me." As part of her Sherut Leumi (National service) she volunteered in The Hedva Ibshitz Centre for the Study of the Holocaust, where she worked as a guide and documented Holocaust survivors.

In 1999 she initiated the alternative Yom HaShoa (Holocaust remembrance day) ceremonies. In the first years the alternative ceremonies took place in Tel Aviv and raised controversy, but later became widespread throughout Israel. The ceremonies focused on remembrance from a personal and social perspective of the participants.


Literary work


In Blau's fiction, ancient Jewish myths serve as springboards for ironic reexamination and reinvention. She is the author of four novels, several plays and short stories published in various anthologies in Israel and abroad. Her latest novel,"The Others", has been sold in eight languages Blau's debut novel, "The Book of Creation" (Hebrew: "Yetzer Lev Ha-Adama", 2007), concerns a lonely woman who can't find a spouse so she creates a man shaped Golem.[2]

Her second book, "Those Well-Raised Girls", (Hebrew: Ne'arot Le-Mofet, 2012) combines dark suspense with a tale of sexual awakening. At a religious high school for girls, a 17-year-old student is preparing a play based on the story of The 93 Girls, Jewish girls from Krakow who committed suicide to avoid rape (a story once believed to true, but now is considered a myth).[3]

Her third book, "Stake", (Hebrew: "Yated", 2014), was written while Blau was performing her one-woman show, "Thy Shall Write". In the show, a heart broken novelist is working on a modern version of the story of Jael, the biblical heroine who killed Sisera to deliver the Israelites.[4]

In 2015 Blau was one of the winners of Levi Eshkol's Prize for Hebrew literature. The judges praised Blau for a daring, nonconformist style, that is at the same time connected to tradition and religious life.[5]


References


  1. Sarah Blau in the institute of translation of Hebrew literature http://www.ithl.org.il/page_14987
  2. Dotan, Keren. "Fiction Raw Love". Haaretz.
  3. "Sarah Blau. Those Well-Raised Girls". The Institute of translation of Hebrew literature.
  4. Sarah Blau in Jerusalem's Writers Festival http://mishkenot.org.il/writersfestival/en/participant/sarah-blau/
  5. "אילן שיינפלד, יגאל סרנה, אלי הירש ושהרה בלאו הם בין הזוכים בפרס רה"מ לספרות עברית תשע"ה" (in Hebrew). Walla. January 20, 2015. Retrieved May 8, 2016.



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