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"The Levant is a world of ancient civilizations which cannot
be sharply differentiated from the Mediterranean world, and is not
synonymous with Islam, even if a majority of its inhabitants are Moslems.
The Levant has a character and history of its own. It is called 'Near'
or 'Middle' East in relationship to Europe, not to itself. Seen from
Asia, it could just as well be called the 'Middle West.' Here, indeed,
Europe and Asia have encroached on one another, time and time again,
leaving their marks in crumbling monuments, and in the shadowy memories
of the Levant's peoples. Ancient Egypt, ancient Israel, and ancient
Greece, Chaldea and Assyria, Ur and Babylon, Tyre, Sidon and Carthage,
Constantinople, Alexandria and Jerusalem are all dimensions of the
Levant. So are Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, which clashed in
dramatic confrontation, giving rise to world civilizations, fracturing
into stubborn local subcultures, and the multi-layered identities
of the Levant's people. It is not exclusively western or eastern,
Christian, Jewish or Moslem. Because of its diversity, the Levant
has been compared to a mosaic-bits of stone of different colors assembled
into a flat picture. To me it is more like a prism whose various facets
are joined by the sharp edge of differences, but each of which ...
reflects or refracts light."
Jacqueline Kahanoff
Jacqueline Kahanoff (1917-1979) was an Egyptian-Jewish essayist and
fiction writer who wrote in English and French, and lived as an adult
in New York, Paris, and Be’er Sheva. The above, taken from one
of her essays, appears in After Arabs and Jews: Remaking Levantine
Culture by Ammiel Alcalay, University of Minnesota Press.
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