Michal Arbell-Tor Explained

thumb|right|200pxMichal Arbel-Tor (Hebrew: מיכל ארבל-תור) is a researcher of Israeli literature and a lecturer in Hebrew literature at Tel Aviv University.[1]

Childhood

Arbel was born on July 27, 1955 in Jerusalem, the daughter of Hana Arbel, a physicist, and Yehuda Arbel, a police officer and pilot. She attended the historic Rehavia Hebrew Gymnasium High School, served in the IDF as a clerk, and studied Hebrew literature and philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and graduated with a bachelor's degree with honors.

Her father Yehuda Arbel was a decorated pilot who served the Israeli Air Force for years, helping bring the legendary Dakota planes to Israel and also led an Israeli rescue mission to help victims of an earthquake in Turkey.[2] [3] In the 1960s, he headed the Israeli Security Agency Jerusalem District.

Career

Arbel began teaching literature at a high school in Jerusalem. She received a doctorate for her work on the writings of S. Y. Agnon, Israel's first Nobel Prize laureate. She taught at University of Cambridge and for five years at Ben-Gurion University. She then began her position at Tel Aviv University.

She has written two books and multiple research articles on Hebrew literature.[4]

Since 2007 Arbel has been the editor of the Suspicion series of detective stories and suspense novels.[5]

Published works

Books

Editor

Articles

About her writings :

Cave of the Patriarchs

In 1968, her father, at the request of Minister of Defense Moshe Dayan, asked her to help excavate the Cave of Machpela, ancient burial site of the Biblical Patriarchs and Matriarchs.[6] [7] The site was barred to non-Muslims for the past 700 years and was only recently made accessible after the Six Day War. Dayan believed that if a separate entrance could be found, Muslim worshipers could use the existing upper area and Jewish worshipers would use the caves below. 12-year-old Michal was the only person small enough to fit through the small opening into the caverns.[8]

Michal wrote in her journal the following: Ropes were tied round me, I was given a torch and matches (to test the air below) and I was lowered. I landed on a heap of papers and money-bills. I found myself in a square room. Opposite me were three tombstones, the middle one higher and more decorated than the other two... They released more rope and I went through the opening, and found myself walking through a low, narrow corridor whose walls were cut out of the rock."

Her description of the cave and the photographs she took were presented to Dayan, who wrote of her, "she was a bright and courageous little girl who was unafraid not only of ghosts and spirits - their existence was not proven, she said - but also of snakes and scorpions, which were a very real danger... Although we did not find the opening we were looking for, I am sure that the chronicles of Israel will record with pride this visit of Michal, the first visit by a Jew to this site in seven hundred years.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: מיכל ארבל. library.osu.edu. 2019-04-05.
  2. Web site: Lavi . Dan . 2017 . Yehuda Arbel, veteran Air Force pilot known as "Mr. Dakota", passed away. His daughter: "He was a tremendous inspiratio . 2022-11-08 . www.israelhayom.co.il.
  3. Web site: אתר חיל-האוויר : סא"ל (מיל') יהודה ארבל הלך לעולמו . 2022-11-08 . www.iaf.org.il.
  4. Web site: כתוב על עורו של הכלב - תפיסת היצירה אצל ש"י עגנון - מיכל ארבל. www.text.org.il. he. 2019-04-05.
  5. News: רומן של סימנון פותח סדרת ספרי מתח בקיבוץ המאוחד . he . הארץ . 2022-11-08.
  6. News: 2006-05-31 . The Little Match Girl . en . Haaretz . 2019-04-05.
  7. News: קרפל . דליה . 31 May 2006 . חסמב"ה במערת המכפלה . he . הארץ . 5 January 2021.
  8. Web site: This Week in History: 1st Jew in Patriarchs' cave . 2022-11-08 . The Jerusalem Post JPost.com . 7 October 2012 . en-US.
  9. Book: Dayan, Moshe . Living with the Bible . 1978 . Weidenfeld and Nicolson . 0-297-77528-6 . London . 46–49 . English . 4998791.