Shoshana Shababo שושנה שבבו | |
---|---|
Born | 1910 Zikhron Ya'akov |
Died | July 4, 1992 81–82) Haifa, Israel | (aged
Shoshana Shababo (Hebrew: שושנה שבבו 1910–1992) was an Israeli writer.
Biography
Shoshana Shababo was born in Zikhron Ya'akov to a Sephardic Jewish family originally from Safed.[1] Her father, Shlomo Shababo, taught Arabic at Al-Azhar University and moved to Zikhron Ya'akov after being invited to teach there.
As a teenager, Shababo attended a local school whose director was the writer Yehuda Burla.[2] She was a gifted student and read a lot of Hebrew and foreign literature. At the age of 15, with the help of a letter of recommendation from Burla, she was accepted to study at the Levinsky College of Education in Tel Aviv. While she was at Levinsky, she began writing short stories and newspaper articles. At 16, she began writing her first book "Maria," which was published in 1932.
After the death of her mother, she moved to Paris and spent time with her brother in London. After her return in 1942, she published her second book, "Ahava be-tsfat" (Love in Safed).[3] That same year at the age of 32, she married David Karsanti. The couple moved to Hadar HaCarmel in Haifa where they opened a wool store. Despite her short stories being successful and popular among readers, the literary establishment heavily criticized her work. This alongside the death of her sister at 22, and her nephew being killed in the 1947–1949 Palestine war led to her distancing herself from writing.[4]
Shababo died on July 4, 1992, in Haifa. She was buried in Zikhron Ya'akov.
References
- ↑ Jacobs, Paula. "Booming Be'er Sheva To Name 13 New Streets After Women". Tablet.
- ↑ Berlovitz, Yaffah. "Prose Writing in the Yishuv: 1882-1948". Jewish Women's Archive.
- ↑ Levy, Lisa Lital (2007). Jewish Writers in the Arab East: Literature, History, and the Politics of Enlightenment, 1863-1914. Berkeley: University of California. p. 370.
- ↑ Gorenberg, Gershom (6 May 2013). "For My Money, I'll Take the Al-Kuwaitis". The Daily Beast.