Doron Rabinovici


Doron Rabinovici is an Israeli-Austrian writer, historian and essayist. He was born in Tel Aviv in 1961 and moved to Vienna in 1964.

Overview

His first book, Papirnik, was a collection of short stories, most of them set in Vienna's Jewish environment. His novel Suche nach M., published three years later, was subsequently translated into English as Search for M., issued by the US publishing company Ariadne Press. Search for M. is the portrayal of two families with Shoah survivors, and their sons, who live with memories they can’t express, in the midst of the Austrians’ negation and denial of their past.
In his next novel, Ohnehin, the main protagonist, a young neurologist, Stefan Sandtner, is confronted with a patient whose sudden and bewildering illness of the mind causes his memory to fail and sets him back in the year 1945: the patient, Herbert Kerber, is stuck in his past as an SS officer. The novel's apparent lightness contrasts with the fundamental issues dealt with: hidden and present past, remembering and forgetting.
His doctoral thesis concerns the reaction of the Viennese Jewish community’s administration to the persecution by the National Socialists and the community’s consequent extermination. Published in 2000 as Instanzen der Ohnmacht by Jüdischer Verlag, it raises the painful questions of resistance and collusion that have come to dominate recent debates on the Holocaust.
In 2001, Rabinovici published Credo und Credit, a collection of essays and articles about literature and politics. By combining serious and ironic texts, he speaks about his identity as a Jew who was born in Israel, lives in Vienna and writes in German.
He has been awarded numerous literature prizes, most recently the Clemens-Brentano-prize of Heidelberg and the Jean-Améry-prize, both in 2002.
In Austria Doron Rabinovici is known as an intellectual voice against racism and anti-Semitism. He is a member of the Grazer Autorenversammlung, a major Austrian writers' association.

Works

Since 1986 Rabinovici has been speaker of the Republican Club New Austria, an intellectual group that was formed against the background of the anti-Semitic presidential campaign of Kurt Waldheim. In 1999 he became the speaker of Demokratische Offensive, a movement geared to mobilize the Austrian civil society against the threat of a center-right coalition with Haider's extreme right-wing party. The Demokratische Offensive called for mass demonstrations against racism. The response was overwhelming – in February 2000, 300,000 people assembled on Vienna's historic Heldenplatz to stage the largest demonstration in Austria's post-war history.

Awards