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Natan Alterman

(1910 - 1970)

Born in Warsaw, Natan Alterman moved to Tel Aviv in 1925 and was a student at the Herzliya Gymnasia. He went to France to study agronomy, but upon his return to Eretz Yisrael he devoted himself to a career of writing. Although known primarily as a poet, Alterman's literary talents extended to other genres as well. He wrote plays, theatrical sketches, and children's literature, and was a distinguished translator, translating works by Shakespeare, Moliere, and Racine into Hebrew. Alterman received many prizes for his translation work, and in 1968 he was awarded the Israel Prize for his contribution to Hebrew Literature.

Alterman's poetry, which he began publishing in 1931, can be divided into two major categories. The first is his contemporary political poetry, much of which emerged in his weekly newspaper columns, beginning in 1934 in Ha'aretz, and from 1943 in Davar. This work confronts bluntly, and often harshly or satirically, the issues facing Israeli society, first in the Yishuv and then in the independent state. Considered the poet of the Yishuv and the literary spokesman of the nationalist movement, he expressed the people's longing for independence; indeed, some of his lyrics, censored by the British, became anthems of the contemporary struggle. Following 1948, Alterman tackled in his work key social and political issues facing the country, and in the aftermath of the Six Day War became a proponent of the Greater Land of Israel ideology.

The other main dimension of Alterman's poetry is his lyrical, meditative work. Influenced by French and Russian symbolist poets, he became himself a leading imagist poet and was an important model in the emergence of a modern, indigenous Hebrew poetry. Deft with uses of language and rhythm, Alterman created a canon of verse rich in images and variations in prosody. Chapters of Jewish history, particularly the Holocaust, find expression in this work, as well as the conflict between natural, pristine forces that represent a lost Eden against the influences of the urbanized, mechanized contemporary world. His love poetry as well reflects the tension between women who portray these opposing impulses.

Alterman's first book of poetry, Kohavim BaHutz (“Outdoor Stars”) was published in 1938. Subsequent editions of poetry, including Shirei Makkot Mitzrayim (“Plagues of Egypt,” 1944) appeared in the 1940's and 1950's. His collected works were published in four volumes in 1961-62.


Sources: Joint Authority for Jewish Zionist Education