Background
He was born in Hebron (al-Khalil) in 1888, eldest of three sons. His father, Eliyahu, was a textile merchant, who relocated from Damascus to Hebron in 1885.
He was born in Hebron (al-Khalil) in 1888, eldest of three sons. His father, Eliyahu, was a textile merchant, who relocated from Damascus to Hebron in 1885.
His work was unique for his period, since in contrast with the vast majority of Hebrew writers of the period he crafted his art based on characters who were either Arabs or Sephardic Jews, residing in the Ottoman Palestine, and his literary influences were predominantly Arab and Middle Eastern. Shami published short stories, one novella, several poems and a number of essays. Shami"s birth name was Yitzhaq Sarwi.
The father was therefore known as "a-Shami" (the Damascene), and that was the origin of the pen-name later adopted by the writer
Eventually, it became his legal name as well. His mother, Rivqa Castel, was a Hebronite from a traditional Sephardic family from the illustrious Castel family who lived in Hebron for generations.
Growing up, Shami spoke Arabic with his father, and Ladino with his mother, and the family conducted its life in customary middle eastern style of the period. As a youth he studied under Rabbi Chaim Hezekiah Medini, renowned author of the Sdei Chemed and Chief Rabbi of Hebron.
The father traveled across the middle east and in the locality for his business, and through his father, Shami was exposed to the local villagers (fallahin), which were later treated as characters in his stories.
He survived the massacre of 1929 by hiding in the home the Mani family. The modern Hebrew critic Gershon Shaked wrote that Vengeance of the Fathers, published in 1928, was one of the most important works in modern Hebrew literature. Anton Shammas the Palestinian writer and critic, wrote—"Shami brought into the scene of modern Hebrew literature some seventy years ago, a local Palestinian validity that hasn"t been matched, or challenged, since Vengeance of the Fathers is the only novel in modern Hebrew literature whose characters, landscapes and narrative voice are all Palestinian." Merle Rubin, in the Los Angeles Times Book Review described it as "Luminous tales from a bygone middle east".
Jerold Auerbach, Professor Emeritus of History and author of Hebron Jews: Memory and Conflict in the Land of Israel, praises Shami"s book Hebron Stories as "evocative glimpses of Hebron at the turn of the twentieth century."
In 2004 Shami was recognized by the Palestinian Academic Society as one of the important Palestinian writers.
With that—he assumed a unique position, as a shared cultural asset of both Israelis and Palestinians.