From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A. A. Kabak in the 1920s

Aharon Avraham Kabak ( Smorgon, 1880 - Jerusalem 1944) was a Lithuanian born Hebrew language author. He was recipient of the Bialik Prize for Literature in 1943.

His "On the narrow path" Ba-Mishcol Ha-Tsar was a novelization of the life of Yeshu, Jesus of Nazareth. [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ Jewish book annual Solomon Grayzel, Jewish Book Council of America - 1992 "Then the author tells us that he met his God on the narrow path (whence the title of the book) on the edge of the abyss. It appears, then, that he owes something 27. AA Kabak, Ba-Mishcol Ha-Tsar (Tel Aviv, 1937); The Narrow Path, trans, ..."
  2. ^ Literature east & west: 14 Modern Language Association of America. Oriental-Western Literary Relations Group, Modern Language Association of America. Conference on Oriental-Western Literary Relations - 1970 "Kabak attempts to convince the reader that Jesus desired his death because he realized that he had nothing more to give to his brethren. The author portrays Jesus the man, as he lived in the Galilee of two thousand years ago."
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A. A. Kabak in the 1920s

Aharon Avraham Kabak ( Smorgon, 1880 - Jerusalem 1944) was a Lithuanian born Hebrew language author. He was recipient of the Bialik Prize for Literature in 1943.

His "On the narrow path" Ba-Mishcol Ha-Tsar was a novelization of the life of Yeshu, Jesus of Nazareth. [1] [2]

References

  1. ^ Jewish book annual Solomon Grayzel, Jewish Book Council of America - 1992 "Then the author tells us that he met his God on the narrow path (whence the title of the book) on the edge of the abyss. It appears, then, that he owes something 27. AA Kabak, Ba-Mishcol Ha-Tsar (Tel Aviv, 1937); The Narrow Path, trans, ..."
  2. ^ Literature east & west: 14 Modern Language Association of America. Oriental-Western Literary Relations Group, Modern Language Association of America. Conference on Oriental-Western Literary Relations - 1970 "Kabak attempts to convince the reader that Jesus desired his death because he realized that he had nothing more to give to his brethren. The author portrays Jesus the man, as he lived in the Galilee of two thousand years ago."

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook