A Palestinian author's award ceremony has been cancelled at Frankfurt Book Fair. This sends the wrong signals at the wrong time
- Written by Denis Muller, Senior Research Fellow, Centre for Advancing Journalism, The University of Melbourne
A ceremony scheduled for the Frankfurt Book Fair, at which a Palestinian author, Adania Schibli, was to receive a prestigious award, has been cancelled in the wake of the Hamas attacks on Israel[1].
A jury had awarded Schibli the 2023 LiBeraturpreis[2] award for her novel, Minor Detail[3]. It juxtaposes the true story of the rape and murder of a Bedouin girl by an Israel army unit in 1949 with the fictional story of a female journalist investigating the crime in the Palestinian city of Ramallah, decades later.
The award, which was to be given[4] at a ceremony on 20 October, is hosted by Litprom, a not-for-profit organisation funded in part by the German government, and the Frankfurt Book Fair. Its objective is to promote women’s literature from African, Asian, Arab and Latin American countries.
Read more: Are calls to cancel two Palestinian writers from Adelaide Writers' Week justified?[5]
Nuanced writing on genocidal histories
Ulrich Noller, a journalist, left the LiBeraturpreis jury in protest at the award, denouncing Shibli’s book as portraying “the State of Israel as a murder machine”. And a review in the widely read, left-leaning German newspaper, Die Tageszeitung (The Daily Newspaper), alleged that the novel used[6] anti-Israel and anti-Semitic narratives, adding:
In this short novel, all Israelis are rapists and murderers, while the Palestinians are victims of trigger-happy occupiers.
These perspectives were not shared by other members of the Litprom jury, nor by many other critics. The book has been nominated in the US for the National Book Awards and the International Book Awards. Its admirers include J.M. Coetzee and Australian writer Mireille Juchau, who wrote this week[7]:
More than ever we need nuanced writing on the irrefutable ways violent and genocidal histories exert their power on the present. Adania Shibli’s Minor Detail is one of the finest recent examples.
Neither Litprom nor the director of the book fair, Juergen Boos, invoked anti-Semitism as a reason for cancelling the award ceremony. In fact, they said the ceremony would go ahead at a future time and place, yet to be fixed.
Due to the war started by Hamas, under which millions of people in Israel and Palestine are suffering, the organizer Litprom decided not to hold the award ceremony of the LiBeraturpreis at the Frankfurt Book Fair. Litprom is looking for a suitable format and setting for the event at a later point.
Boos, in his statement announcing the cancellation[9], said:
We strongly condemn Hamas’s barbaric terror war against Israel […] Frankfurter Buchmesse has always been about humanity, its focus has always been on peaceful and democratic discourse […] Frankfurter Buchmesse stands with complete solidarity on the side of Israel.
He went on to say that Israeli and Jewish voices would be given additional time on the book fair’s stages and that an event called “Out of Concern for Israel” would be staged in the fair’s cultural and political pavilion.
Read more: Deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust spurs a crisis of confidence in the idea of Israel – and its possible renewal[10]
Treated as a ‘symbol’?
This is consistent with the widespread reaction to the atrocities committed by Hamas in southern Israel. They are on a scale of savagery seldom brought into public view.