
Jacob Israël de Haan - JERUSALEM
AMSTERDAM - EM. QUERIDO - 1921
INHOUD.
HAMAME TROUWT.
DE DONKERE BRON.
MIJN VRIEND SAÏD EFFENDI.
SABBATH IN JERUZALEM.
DE STAD VAN JIRMÉJAHOE.
YATACK-IL-KHARAMIYEH??
WIJ VASTEN.
In the bustling quarters of Jerusalem, a young Yemenite maid named Hamame faces the prospect of her second marriage. After a costly broken engagement, she must navigate family expectations, a demanding dowry, and the looming presence of a mother labeled a “witch.” The narrative captures her uncertainty, the financial hurdles, and the hope that this union might finally bring stability.
The story unfolds amid vivid wedding preparations: richly embroidered garments, fragrant incense, and the clamor of drums and water‑pipes filling the air. Tensions flare between Hamame and the household cook, Reine, whose rivalry adds a layer of intrigue to the festivities. Through keen observation, the listener is drawn into the textures of Yemenite tradition, the communal celebrations, and the fragile balance between duty and desire.
Language
nl
Duration
~1 hours (110K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Miranda van de Heijning and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
Release date
2005-02-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1881–1924
A Dutch writer, poet, and journalist whose life moved from literary scandal to fierce political controversy, he remains one of the most striking Jewish intellectual figures of the early 20th century. His work and death in Jerusalem in 1924 have kept his name alive in literature, journalism, and Middle Eastern history.
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