ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 11月19日 11時33分


Amos Oz was 8 the first time he was called a traitor. It was 1947, and the celebrated Israeli writer was just a boy living in Jerusalem under the British mandate. He made the mistake of befriending an officer from the occupying army. Soon, the ugly word was scrawled in black paint on the side of his home. Now 77, Amos wears the “traitor” label comfortably — like a “badge of honor,” he told @ニューヨーク・タイムズ. This familiarity has informed his latest novel, “Judas,” which is not only named after the most reviled traitor in history, but also reimagines the story of the Crucifixion. His alternative theory: Judas was not a traitor but in fact the truest believer in Jesus’ divinity, more so than even Jesus himself. In the book, a disheveled biblical scholar who proposes his version of the Crucifixion offers this succinct definition of a traitor: “Anyone willing to change will always be considered a traitor by those who cannot change and are scared to death of change and don’t understand it and loathe change.” The photographer @george_etheredge took this #portrait of #AmosOz in Manhattan.


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