ALGIERS: A reading event for a book titled “Jewish Algeria” was canceled on Saturday, the organizers told AFP, after critics said it was untimely amid the war in Gaza.
L’Arbre a dire, a bookshop in the capital Algiers that was set to hold the event discussing Algeria’s Jewish heritage, said it had to call it off without providing further details.
Its cancelation came days after an Islamist lawmaker, Zouhir Fares, said in a statement that the culture ministry was banning the reading following a formal plea.
There have been no official statements from the Algerian authorities on the book or reading events.
Fares also posted the letter in which he had called on authorities to take action, calling the book a form of “cultural normalization with Zionists.”
In the letter, he said the book’s foreword was written by “a citizen of the Zionist entity (Israel) who had served in its army not long ago,” referring to French author Valerie Zenatti.
An earlier book reading on Thursday in Tizi Ouzou, some 100 kilometers (60 miles) east of Algiers, was also called off, Librairie Cheikh, the organizing bookstore, said on Facebook.
In an interview with Algerian newspaper Le Soir last February, the book’s author Hedia Bensahli said “Jewish Algeria” was a book about Algeria, and not about “what’s happening in other parts of the world.”
She said the book, spanning a history of over 2,000 years, had already been on sale when the Gaza war broke out last year.
“Like everyone else, I could not have foreseen the Hamas attacks on October 7, nor the bloody response of the Israeli army,” she said.
L’Arbre a dire said the book was no longer available in its collection but said authorities have not ordered its removal.
Algeria book reading on Jewish heritage canceled amid Gaza war
https://arab.news/vydb8
Algeria book reading on Jewish heritage canceled amid Gaza war
- Its cancelation came days after an Islamist lawmaker, Zouhir Fares, said in a statement that the culture ministry was banning the reading following a formal plea
- Fares also posted the letter in which he had called on authorities to take action, calling the book a form of “cultural normalization with Zionists“