“The Jews
are alone in the world. If Israel survives, it will be solely because of Jewish
efforts. And Jewish resources. Yet at this moment Israel is our only reliable
and unconditional ally. We can rely more on Israel than Israel can rely on us.”
A year and a
half later, Vladimir Nabokov was interviewed by Nurit Beretzky for the Israeli
newspaper Ma’ariv of Tel Aviv. She asked him about “the situation in the
Middle East” and he replied:
“There exist
several subjects in which I have expert knowledge: certain groups of
butterflies, Pushkin, the art of chess problems, translation from and into
English, Russian and French, word-play, novels, insomnia, and immortality. But
among those subjects, politics is not represented. I can only reply to your
question about the Near East in a very amateur way: I fervently favor total
friendship between America and Israel and am emotionally inclined to take
Israel’s side in all political matters.”
Nabokov’s support
for Israel shouldn’t surprise us. His wife, Véra Slonim, was Jewish. His grandfather, Dmitri
Nikolaevich Nabokov, was minister of justice under Czar Alexander II, and supported
Jewish rights. The novelist’s father, a liberal statesman and champion of
Jewish legal equality, was Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov. He condemned publication
of the anti-Semitic tract Protocols of the Elders of Zion and the pogrom
in Kishinev in 1903, in which dozens of Jews were murdered.
In the
interview quoted above, Nabokov also said: “I am ready to accept any regime –
Socialistic, Royalistic, Janitorial, – provided mind and body are free.”
[The Nabokov
interview is collected in Think, Write, Speak: Uncollected Essays, Reviews,
Interviews, and Letters to the Editor (ed. Brian Boyd and Anastasia
Tolstoy, Knopf, 2019).]
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