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300 pages, Paperback
First published May 1, 2003
The Frenks are clever, but their hearts are hard as the stones in Mehmed's mill," commented a peasant in breeches, stroking his long black beard.Four years ago, I wrote an essay discussing André Aciman's memoir, Out of Egypt. Aciman grew up in a large, extended Jewish family in Alexandria in the late 1950s and early 60s. Alexandria was then a highly cosmopolitan city, with a population from a multitude of ethnic roots. His family was forced to leave in 1964, when Egypt expelled nearly all non-Arabs, citizen and non-citizen alike. Aciman was 14 years old when they left. Out of Egypt is a haunting memoir of growing up in a happy but lost world. I notice that I've referred to it frequently in subsequent posts.
I had grown much like the weeds around the odd corners of the garden of the big house, drawing upon its cloister-like serenity the stuff that went to make my dreams and fantasies. Mine had been a world so filled with wonder and exciting fancies that I had not missed the companionship of other children.He found his grammar school boring and stifling, but when he began high school, he attended Le Petit Lycée Français -- a highly innovative school for its time (or for any time, I'd say). The instructors were approachable and friendly, and enjoyed answering questions. Students in the multi-ethnic student body were taught to study as a group, rather than being pitted against each other competitively. Virtually all of the students were bright and curious and Leon found them enjoyable to work with.
Reared in the atmosphere of courtesy and hospitality of the East, I found both teachers and pupils shockingly intolerant of anything that deviated ever so slightly from what they had been accustomed to. Their readiness to ridicule foreigners -- their names, their accents, and their civility -- struck me as singularly coarse.He later decided that this was the cost of democracy -- he noted how young people from every social and economic class played together as equals. He regretted the cost, but approved of the result.