Ana Šomlo

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Ana Šomlo
Ana Šomlo.jpg
Šomlo in 2003
Born
Ana Šomlo
Ана Шомло

1935
Negotin, Serbia
Alma materUniversity of Belgrade
OccupationWriter, journalist, translator
Years active1957–present
Spouse(s)Ivan Ninić

Ana Šomlo (Serbian: Ана Шомло; born 1935 in Negotin) is a Serbian-Israeli writer and journalist who writes short prose and novels. She is also a prominent translator from Hebrew into Serbo-Croatian.[1]

Early life and education[]

Ana Šomlo was born in 1935 in Negotin, Serbia to Miroslav Šomlo and Budimka Šomlo (née Smederevac). She spent her early childhood in Negotin. Her father was interned twice, in 1941 and 1942, in a camp near Zaječar. Ana lived until 1943, together with her sister, with relatives from Vršac, after which she returned to Negotin. Due to the anti-Semitic measures of the German authorities, she fled with her father and sister to Malajnica, and then to the Homolje mountains, where they hid until the end of the Second World War. After the war, her family left Negotin and moved to Vršac. From 1946 to 1948, she lived in Pančevo, where her father worked on the design and construction of the bridge that connects Belgrade with the city. After the bridge was completed, the family moved to Novi Sad.[2]

Šomlo studied philology and oriental literature at the University of Belgrade. After being awarded a scholarship from the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, she enrolled in postgraduate studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1957, where she remained for two years to improve her knowledge of Hebrew and Arabic.

Career[]

During her stay in Israel, she began writing political news articles and after returning to Belgrade, she was employed by the magazine Duga. She was transferred in 1960 as a reporter to the newly established Belgrade Television. In addition to her work in television, she wrote, translated, and taught Hebrew.[2] She worked an editor of the magazines ТВ – Ревију and РТВ – Теорија и пракса.[3]

As an expert in Hebrew and Israeli literature, Šomlo has made a great contribution in the field of translation from Hebrew into Serbian. She has published a large number of literary translations and has dedicated many years to compiling dictionaries and encyclopedic work. She also compiled the "Hebrew-Serbo-Croatian/Serbo-Croatian-Hebrew Dictionary" and published the textbook "Learn Hebrew Yourself". As a translator from Hebrew, and in Hebrew, she made a significant contribution to strengthening Serbian-Hebrew cultural and literary ties and the promotion of Israeli literature in the world, for which she was awarded the "Kalat Haor" award in 2005.[4] She is a contributor to several encyclopedias: in Prosveta's "Encyclopedia" (Belgrade, 1969) she wrote articles on Israeli literature. In "Encyclopaedia Judaica" (Keter, Jerusalem 1974), she wrote about writers of Jewish origin from the Balkans. In the "Croatian General Lexicon" (Miroslav Krleža Lexicographic Institute, 1996) she has written about contemporary Israeli writers.

Šomlo has also engaged in literary creation, publishing several novels and collections of short stories. For her collection of stories Поново у Јерусалиму ("Back in Jerusalem"), she received an award from the in 1996. Perhaps the most interesting literary achievement of Ana Šomlo is her book 'Миленина писма Кафки ("Milena's Letters to Kafka"), which was published in 1988.

Activism[]

Šomlo emigrated to Israel in 1992.[1] She has been involved with the Hitahdut olej Jugoslavije, the Association of olim from Yugoslavia,[5] of which she was its president between 2000 and 2003, also editing its magazine Most.[6]

Works[]

Novels[]

  • "Леа Штрасер" (Независна издања Слободана Машића, Belgrade, 1980)
  • "Гласови дијаспоре" (Књижевне новине, Belgrade, 1985)
  • "Миленина писма Кафки" (Књижевна заједница Новог Сада, 1988)
  • "Као…" (Спектар, Zagreb, 1983, Просвета, Belgrade, 1990)
  • "Хазари или обнова византијског романа", conversations with Milorad Pavić (БИГЗ, Belgrade, 1990)
  • "Била сам твоје море: преписка Франца Кафке и Милене Јесенске", (Пешић и синови, Belgrade, 2005)
  • "Жути пркос" ("Инђић", Belgrade, 2006)

Collections of stories[]

  • "Поново у Јерусалиму" (Босанска књига, Sarajevo, 1997 și Просвета, Belgrade, 2006)
  • "Идуће године у Јерусалиму" (Мирослав, Belgrade, 2000)

Translations from Hebrew into Serbian[]

  • Aharon Appelfeld, Badenheim 1939 (Dečje novine, Belgrade, 1989 )
  • Anthology of stories from Israel (Багдала, Crușevaț, 1995 )
  • Anthology of Israeli poetry and prose (Zidne novine, Sarajevo, 1995 )
  • Shimon Peres, New Genesis (БМГ, Belgrade, 1999 )
  • Lili Halpert Zamir, Danilo Kiš, A Dark Odyssey (Athens, Belgrade, 2000)
  • Shulamit Lapid, Jewelry (Clio, Belgrade, 2004 )
  • David Grosman, Лављи мед – Мит о Самсону (Геопоетика, Belgrade, 2006)
  • Israel Gutman, Haima Shacker, ''The Holocaust and its Significance (Завод за уџбенике, Службени гласник, Belgrade, 2010) – with Ella Krstic
  • The power of words and other Israeli stories (Кућа поезије, Banja Luka, 2014)
  • Anthology of Modern Israeli Poetry (Кућа поезије, Banja Luka, 2015)

Dictionaries and manuals[]

  • "Хебрејско–српскохрватски и српскохрватско–хебрејски речник" ("Hebrew-Serbo-Croatian and Serbo-Croatian-Hebrew Dictionary", Yugoslav Association of Jews in Israel, Tel Aviv, 1993)
  • "Учите сами хебрејски" (Издање аутора, Netanya, 1996)
  • "Хебрејско–српски речник", Јасен, (Belgrade, 2007) ("Hebrew – Serbian Dictionary", Jasen, Belgrade, 2007)

Other works[]

  • Collection of interviews Бити и опстати на телевизији (Radio Television of Serbia, Belgrade, 2004)
  • Мој свет књига: дневник читања (Пешић și fiii, Belgrade, 2008)

References[]

  1. ^ a b Знаменити Јевреји Србије
  2. ^ a b Ana Šomlo
  3. ^ Milena's Letters to Kafka
  4. ^ The "Kalat Haor" award for 2005 was given to Ana Shomlo
  5. ^ Yugoslavia. The Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women
  6. ^ Aleksandar Gaon, M. Radovanović (2011). Famous Jews of Serbia: a biographical lexicon. Belgrade: Association of Jewish Communities of Serbia. p. 271. ISBN 978-86-915145-0-1
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