J Post
 
A  Kafkaesque vision 
By _ASSOCIATED  PRESS_ (mailto:[email protected])   
07/22/2010  11:39 

Never-published  writings trapped in trial. 

 
It seems  almost Kafkaesque: Ten safety deposit boxes of never-published 
writings by _Franz Kafka_ 
(http://jpost.headup.com/Services/FrontService/Horizon/RenderStatic.aspx?uri=http://schemas.semantinet.com/BookAuthor/name/Franz%
20Kafka/displaytype/Writer/dbpediaSubject/Franz_Kafka/&name=Franz Kafka) , 
their exact contents  unknown, are trapped in courts and bureaucracy, much 
like one of the nightmarish  visions created by the author himself.
 
The papers, retrieved from bank vaults where they have sat untouched and  
unread for decades, could shed new light on one of literature's darkest  
figures.

In the past week, the pages have been pulled from safety deposit  boxes in 
Tel Aviv and Zurich, Switzerland, on the order of an Israeli court over  the 
objections of two elderly women who claim to have inherited them from their 
 mother.

"Kafka could easily have written a story like this, where you try  to do 
something and it all goes wrong and everything remains unresolved," said  Sara 
Loeb, a Tel Aviv-based author of two books about the writer. "It's really a 
 case of life imitating art."

Literary experts in both cities are sifting  through the boxes, and the 
contents are expected to be of priceless literary and  monetary value. What 
exactly is there remains unknown, but the papers include  handwritten 
manuscripts, letters and various literary works by the famed Jewish  writer, 
said 
Meir Heller, an attorney for the Israeli National Library, which  also claims 
ownership of the trove.

Loeb says the cache could include  endings to some of Kafka's major works, 
many of which remained unfinished in his  lifetime.

"We could find out about his methods, his style, how his art  was created, 
how he built a text," she said.

Kafka, a _Prague_ 
(http://jpost.headup.com/Services/FrontService/Horizon/RenderStatic.aspx?uri=http://schemas.semantinet.com/City/name/Prague/displaytyp
e/City/dbpediaSubject/Prague/&name=Prague)  native who wrote in German,  
was one of the most influential writers of the 20th century, known for his  
surreal tales of everyman protagonists crushed by mysterious authorities or  
twisted by unknown shames. His works have become classics, like "The  
Metamorphosis," in which a salesman wakes up transformed into a giant insect,  
and 
"The Trial," where a bank clerk is put through an excruciating trial without 
 ever being told the charges against him.

But the newly emerged writings  won't see the light of day until the 
Israeli court unravels the tangled question  of the collection's rightful owner.

The case boils down to the  interpretation of the will of Max Brod, Kafka's 
longtime friend and publisher.  Kafka bequeathed his writings to Brod 
shortly before his own death from  tuberculosis in 1924, instructing his friend 
to burn everything  unread.

Brod ignored Kafka's wishes and published most of what was in his  
possession, including the novels "The Trial," ''The Castle" and  "Amerika."

But Brod, who smuggled some of the manuscripts to pre-state _Israel_ 
(http://jpost.headup.com/Services/FrontService/Horizon/RenderStatic.aspx?uri=http:/
/schemas.semantinet.com/Country/name/Israel/displaytype/Country/dbpediaSubje
ct/Israel/&name=Israel)  when he fled the Nazis in  1938, didn't publish 
everything. Upon his death in 1968, Brod left his personal  secretary, Esther 
Hoffe, in charge of his literary estate and instructed her to  transfer the 
Kafka papers to an academic institution.

Instead, for the  next four decades, Hoffe kept the papers in her Tel Aviv 
apartment and in safety  deposit boxes in Tel Aviv and Zurich banks.

She sold some of the items  for hefty sums. In 1988, for instance, Hoffe 
auctioned off the original  manuscript of "The Trial" at Sotheby's in London. 
It went for $1.8 million to  the German Literature Archive in Marbach, north 
of Stuttgart.

When Hoffe  died three years ago at age 101, she left the collection to her 
two daughters,  Eva Hoffe and Ruth Wiesler, both Holocaust survivors like 
herself.

But  the Israeli National Library has long claimed the papers, saying Brod 
intended  for the collection to end up in its hands. It filed an injunction 
against the  execution of Hoffe's will.

"As long as Esther Hoffe was alive, she was  responsible, she could still 
say, 'I am handling it,'" said Heller, the  library's lawyer. "The late Mrs. 
Hoffe did not do what the late Mr. Brod asked  her to do and deposit the 
documents in the national library. ... The will was  not honored, it was 
desecrated."

Oded Hacohen, a lawyer for Eva Hoffe,  said Brod's will gave the collection 
to her mother as a gift and gave her the  right to bequeath it to the 
Israel National Museum or any institution of her  choosing, in Israel or 
abroad, 
under whatever conditions she decides. He cited a  1974 Tel Aviv District 
Court ruling backing that interpretation and quoting  Brod's will.

That means, he said, Eva Hoffe inherited the documents  legally and is free 
to do with them as she pleases, including selling them to  the German 
Literature Archive, which has been negotiating with her to buy the  remaining 
Kafka and Brod papers.

"Esther Hoffe dedicated her life to  publishing Brod's works. ... Brod 
wrote in his will that her family should enjoy  the profits," Hacohen said.

Heller retorts that the will only refers to  royalties, not ownership, and 
didn't give Esther Hoffe the right to hand the  collection to her heirs. He 
argued in court that since she failed to pick an  archive to receive the 
documents, the court should do so. Heller contended in  court that the Israeli 
National Library was Brod's first preference, saying he  had evidence Brod 
wrote a later will bequeathing his literary estate directly to  it.

The Tel Aviv Family Court ordered the collection opened a year ago,  saying 
it wants to know what is there before deciding who owns it. That ruling  
won't come until experts are done inspecting the papers, which could take  
several weeks.

"The library does not intend to give up the cultural  assets that legally 
belong to it and thus to the Israeli and Jewish people,"  said David 
Blumberg, chairman of the Israel National Library, which is a  nonprofit and 
non-governmental body.

Ulrich von Buelow, the director of  manuscripts at the German Literary 
Archive, said Brod and Esther Hoffe had  frequent discussions with the archive 
over placing the material  there.

"We are interested in having the manuscripts because we have so  many 
others, also from Brod, and so many letters that would complement them,"  von 
Buelow said.

Whatever they contain, the piles of handwritten material  will keep 
historians and researchers busy for years, Heller said.

Aside  from previously unknown versions of Kafka's work, the trove could 
give more  insight on Kafka's personal life, including his relationship with 
his lover,  Dora Diamant. It may include papers that Kafka gave to Diamant 
but were stolen  by the German Gestapo from her Berlin apartment in 1933, 
later obtained by Brod  after World War II.

Loeb suspected that Brod kept many of the documents  away from the public 
for fear their publication could compromise his friend's  legacy.

"Kafka was very critical. He was not an easy man," she said.  "Maybe Brod 
was worried that this could ruin his image." 

-- 
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