Yehuda Amichai

Yehuda Amichai, (b. May 3, 1924,
Würzburg, Germany—d. September 22, 2000,
Jerusalem, Israel), Israeli writer who
is best known for his poetry.
Amichai
and his Orthodox Jewish family
immigrated to Palestine in 1936. During
World War II he served in the British
army, but he later fought the British as
a guerrilla prior to the formation of
Israel; he also was involved in the
Arab-Israeli conflicts of 1956 and 1973.
Amichai attended the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem and taught for several
years at secondary schools.
Amichai’s poetry reflects his total
commitment to the state of Israel, and
from his first collection, Akhshav u-ve-yamim
aḥerim (1955; “Now and in Other Days”),
he employed biblical images and Jewish
history. He also compared modern times
with ancient, heroic ages and sought to
expand biblical language in order to
encompass contemporary phenomena. In the
1970s he introduced sexuality as a
subject in his poems. With Amen (1977)
he garnered a wider audience through the
translation of his poems into English by
Ted Hughes. Influenced by modern
American and English poets, including
W.H. Auden, Amichai was noted for his
lyrical use of everyday language and the
simplicity of his work. The
English-language collection The Selected
Poetry of Yehuda Amichai (1986) contains
selections from his many publications in
Hebrew.
In
addition to short stories and plays,
Amichai also wrote novels, of which the
best known is Lo me-achshav, lo mi-kan
(1963; Not of This Time, Not of This
Place), about the quest for identity of
a Jewish immigrant to Israel. Gam ha-ʾegrof
hayah paʿam yad petuḥah (1989; Even a
Fist Was Once an Open Palm with Fingers)
is a selection of his poetry in
translation. Open Closed Open (2000)
continued to explore the Israeli
experience.