Ronit Matalon

Israeli author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ronit Matalon (Hebrew: רונית מטלון; May 25, 1959 – December 28, 2017) was an Israeli fiction writer.

Native name
רונית מטלון
Born
Ronit Matalon

(1959-05-25)25 May 1959
Died28 December 2017(2017-12-28) (aged 58)
Haifa, Israel
OccupationAuthor
Quick facts Native name, Born ...
Ronit Matalon
Native name
רונית מטלון
Born
Ronit Matalon

(1959-05-25)25 May 1959
Died28 December 2017(2017-12-28) (aged 58)
Haifa, Israel
OccupationAuthor
LanguageHebrew
NationalityIsraeli

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Biography

Ronit Matalon was born in Ganei Tikva, Israel, the daughter of Egyptian Jewish immigrants. Matalon studied literature and philosophy at Tel Aviv University and worked as a journalist for Haaretz newspaper, where she covered Gaza and the West Bank between 1987 and 1993.[1] She was a resident of Haifa and taught literature at the University of Haifa.[2] She also taught at the Camera Obscura school for the Arts in Tel Aviv.[citation needed]

Matalon was also a liberal social activist, and participated in demonstrations organized by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel. She was a member of the Art and Culture Council of the Ministry of Education, and the Forum for Mediterranean Culture at the Van Leer Institute. In 2003, she was a co-petitioner to the Supreme Court of Israel to investigate the assassination of Salah Shehade.[3]

Awards and recognition

Novels

An illustration by Ruth Zarfati for the book A Story that Begins with a Snake's Funeral
  • Strangers at Home (1992)
  • A Story that Begins with a Snake's Funeral (1994, children's book)
  • The One Facing Us (1995)
  • Sarah Sarah (2000)
  • Reading and Writing (2001)
  • Bliss (2003) [11]
  • Uncover Her Face (2005)
  • The Sound of Our Steps (2008)[12]
  • And the Bride Closed the Door (2016) Keter

Articles

  • "Weddings and Anti-Weddings", Haaretz, 2008[13]

References

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