Creator Bio
Dahlia Ravikovitch
1936–2005
Dahlia Ravikovitch was a poet, author, and peace activist. Born in Ramat-Gan, she grew up on Kibbutz Geva and in Haifa. She had a troubled childhood and adolescence, living in foster homes before beginning her military service and studying literature at the Hebrew University. Her first book of poetry, Ahavat tapuaḥ ha-zahav (The Love of an Orange) was published in 1959 to great acclaim. Many of her works have been translated, and a number of her poems have been set to music. Ravikovitch also translated works into Hebrew, including the poetry of W. B. Yeats and T. S. Eliot. As a prominent left-wing activist and social critic, Ravikovitch became deeply involved in the peace movement in the 1980s. The work of her later years reflected her passionate activism. She received the 1998 Israel Prize for Poetry.
Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator
Primary Source
Clockwork Doll
That night, I was a clockwork doll
and I whirled around, this way and that,
and I fell on my face and shattered to bits
and they tried to fix me with all their skill.
Then I was a proper doll once…
Primary Source
We Had an Understanding
Savta, grandma,
could it be our transparent skin,
skin that doesn’t protect the flesh,
not in the least.
This story of ours
has details that are better left untold,
it’s good to leave blots of…
Primary Source
Stones
Stones are stones.
Why did you say stones?
Why did you throw stones?
Why are you standing here, child?
What’s got into you to throw stones at soldiers?
Why aren’t you afraid?
Why aren’t you worried…