Abraham Mapu

Abraham Mapu, (b. Jan. 10, 1808,
near Kovno, Lithuania, Russian Empire—d.
Oct. 9, 1867, Königsberg, East Prussia
[now Kaliningrad, Russia]), author of
the first Hebrew novel, Ahavat Ziyyon
(1853; Annou: Prince and Peasant), an
idyllic historical romance set in the
days of the prophet Isaiah. Couched in
florid biblical language, it artfully
depicts pastoral life in ancient Israel;
the book attained immediate popularity
and was later translated into several
languages.
A
teacher of religion and German, Mapu was
an influential advocate of the Haskalah,
or Enlightenment, movement. Influenced
stylistically by Victor Hugo and Eugène
Sue, Mapu’s novels romanticized a
sovereign Israel and indirectly paved
the way for the revival of Jewish
nationalism and the Zionist movement.
Other novels include ʿAyiṭ tzavuaʿ
(1858–69; “The Hypocrite”), an attack on
social and religious injustice in the
ghetto; Ashmat Shomron (1865; “Guilt of
Samaria”), a biblical epic about the
hostility between Jerusalem and Samaria
in the time of King Ahaz; and Ḥoze
ḥezyonot, (1869; “The Visionary”), an
exposé of Ḥasidism, which was
confiscated by religious authorities.