Court orders Kafka scripts moved to Israeli National Library
By Korea HeraldPublished : Oct. 15, 2012 - 20:50
JERUSALEM (AP) ― After a long, tangled journey that Franz Kafka could have written about himself, an unseen treasure of writings by the surrealist author will be put on display and later online, an Israeli court ruled in documents released Sunday.
Ownership of the papers had been in dispute after the Israeli National Library claimed them, over the wishes of two sisters who had inherited the vast collection of rare documents from their mother and insisted on keeping them.
Friday’s ruling by the Tel Aviv District Family Court ordered the collection to be transferred to the library in Jerusalem, which had argued that Max Brod, Kafka’s close friend, had bequeathed the manuscripts to the library in his will.
The two sisters, Eva Hoffe and Ruth Wiesler, had inherited the documents from their mother, Brod’s secretary, and had been storing them in a Tel Aviv apartment and bank vaults.
Kafka, a Jewish Prague native who wrote in German, is known for his dark tales of everyman protagonists crushed by mysterious authorities or twisted by unknown shames. His works have become classics, like “The Metamorphosis,’’ in which a salesman wakes up transformed into a giant insect, and “The Trial,’’ where a bank clerk is put through an excruciating trial without ever being told the charges against him.
The trove is said to include Brod’s personal diary and some of Kafka’s writings, including correspondence the two kept with other notable writers, which could shed new light on one of literature’s most influential figures.
The German Literary Archive was not part of the legal proceedings but had backed the sisters’ claims, hoping to purchase the manuscripts and arguing that they belong in Germany.
Ulrich Raulff, who heads the archive, said the papers have drawn great interest because they will likely reveal much about the years in Kafka’s life that the public knows very little about.
“I hope that the Israeli National Library will provide open access to the material for the public as soon as possible,’’ he said. “Researchers have been waiting for the material with excitement for years already.’’
Kafka gave his writings to Brod shortly before his own death from tuberculosis in 1924, instructing his friend to burn everything unread.
Ownership of the papers had been in dispute after the Israeli National Library claimed them, over the wishes of two sisters who had inherited the vast collection of rare documents from their mother and insisted on keeping them.
Friday’s ruling by the Tel Aviv District Family Court ordered the collection to be transferred to the library in Jerusalem, which had argued that Max Brod, Kafka’s close friend, had bequeathed the manuscripts to the library in his will.
The two sisters, Eva Hoffe and Ruth Wiesler, had inherited the documents from their mother, Brod’s secretary, and had been storing them in a Tel Aviv apartment and bank vaults.
Kafka, a Jewish Prague native who wrote in German, is known for his dark tales of everyman protagonists crushed by mysterious authorities or twisted by unknown shames. His works have become classics, like “The Metamorphosis,’’ in which a salesman wakes up transformed into a giant insect, and “The Trial,’’ where a bank clerk is put through an excruciating trial without ever being told the charges against him.
The trove is said to include Brod’s personal diary and some of Kafka’s writings, including correspondence the two kept with other notable writers, which could shed new light on one of literature’s most influential figures.
The German Literary Archive was not part of the legal proceedings but had backed the sisters’ claims, hoping to purchase the manuscripts and arguing that they belong in Germany.
Ulrich Raulff, who heads the archive, said the papers have drawn great interest because they will likely reveal much about the years in Kafka’s life that the public knows very little about.
“I hope that the Israeli National Library will provide open access to the material for the public as soon as possible,’’ he said. “Researchers have been waiting for the material with excitement for years already.’’
Kafka gave his writings to Brod shortly before his own death from tuberculosis in 1924, instructing his friend to burn everything unread.
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Articles by Korea Herald