fbpx

Joyce Carol Oates Reflects on Her Family’s Lost Jewish Heritage

[additional-authors]
May 14, 2019
Author, Poet and Journalist Joyce Carol Oats remembers her family’s lost Jewish heritage. Photo from Flickr.

(JTA) — Joyce Carol Oates’ grandmother was Jewish, but the author wasn’t aware of that fact until after her grandmother’s death in 1970. After immigrating to America, Oates’ ancestor hid her Jewish heritage from the rest of her family.

“I felt an immense loss and sympathy because I never really knew that my grandmother was Jewish, so my whole cultural inheritance was lost,” the acclaimed novelist told The Associated Press on Sunday in Jerusalem, where she received the prestigious Jerusalem Prize.

Her grandmother, who fled persecution in Germany in the late 19th century, helped foster Oates’ love of books, giving her a copy of “Alice in Wonderland” and a library card at a young age.

“No one else in my Hungarian and Irish family had any interest in books,” she said. “There’s a tragedy at the loss of my grandmother’s history, but then a joy in this connection.”

Oates, who at 80 is still writing novels (she has published nearly 60 to date), said she has been inspired by her first trip to Israel.

“I’m excited to be here, listening to the Hebrew language,” she said. “I’m very interested in that culture and identity … and trying to see how I could write about it.”

Oates has won a National Book Award and been nominated five times for the Pulitzer Prize, but she told AP that the Jerusalem Prize is “the high point” of her career. Other writers who have won the prize — awarded biannually at the Jerusalem International Book Fair to authors who write about themes of human freedom — include Jorge Luis Borges, Susan Sontag, Arthur Miller, V.S. Naipaul and Octavio Paz.

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

AJU’s Ziegler School: Growth and Transformation

The challenge is how we can reinvent rabbinical training so that it’s not clinging to models that no longer work, is sustainable, and addresses the needs of today and tomorrow’s Jewish community.

Celebrate National Hamburger Month

While there may be limitations on how to enjoy burgers due to the laws of kashrut, it just means Jews have to get a little more creative.

An American Shabbat

When I travel in America, I love being invited to observe Shabbat building bridges – uniting tribes – among Christians.

The End of an Anti-Israel Propaganda NGO – More to Come?

Perhaps this also signals a belated reckoning for other false-flag NGOs claiming to promote human rights. The damage from terror-supporting propaganda will take many years to reverse, but at least further abuse can finally be prevented.

Shavuot: Return to Sinai

Shavuot is that moment in the year where all becomes one – People Israel, Torah, memory and the Divine – a unification begun at Sinai.

A New Jewish College

This idea is not just about fleeing antisemitism, nor proving native loyalty. It is about experiencing life from a different angle than the coasts.

Two Down, One to Go

So now, for my wife and me, it’s time for the mezinka, an Ashkenazi Jewish wedding custom that is observed when parents marry off their last child.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.