The Unreachable City: Sanctity, History, and Violence in the French Jerusalem Novel

What place does Jerusalem occupy in contemporary French literature—and what does this place reveal about literature itself? This essay examines eleven novels and short stories, ranging from André Schwarz-Bart to Nathan Devers, from Valérie Zenatti to Justine Augier, from Élie Wiesel to Mathias Énard, and demonstrates that Jerusalem is never merely a backdrop in these works, but rather a structuring principle: a city that disorients the characters, brings repressed memories back to the surface, imposes affiliations, and shatters established forms. Three functional types emerge from the comparison—Jerusalem as an eschatological space, as a political focal point, and as an existential mirror—which are distributed and overlap throughout the texts without ever converging. A specifically French perspective proves constitutive: Republican secularism, the legacy of the Enlightenment, the experience of the Shoah as part of its own history—all of this colors the perception of a city equally sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and whose threefold sanctity has for centuries produced wars as well as longings. Arab and Muslim authors such as Karim Kattan, Amin Maalouf, and Adania Shibli add their own distinctive emphasis, describing Jerusalem not as the destination of a long-held yearning, but as the starting point of forced exile—and using French as a strategically chosen medium to inscribe Palestinian concepts and experiences into a Western discourse that otherwise does not recognize them. What unites the works examined, beyond all differences, is the awareness that Jerusalem eludes the sovereign narrative gaze: None of these texts triumphs over its subject; all bear the marks of the place where they have failed.

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Enclosed Gardens: Karim Kattan

Karim Kattan's poetry collection "Hortus conclusus" is a poetic exploration of the garden as a site of memory, desire, and colonial transformation. Between Bethlehem and Babylon, Knossos and Glastonbury, a dense topography unfolds, composed of mythical and geopolitically charged motifs. The titular "enclosed garden"—a real monastery in Artas near Bethlehem—becomes the condensed image of a poetic space where beauty and exclusion, healing and trauma intertwine. The poems are imbued with lyrical sensuality and historical weight; they speak of checkpoints, bodies, martyrs, witches, and gods, and they repeatedly circle the question: Where is a place where one is allowed to breathe, love, and survive? Central to this is the recurring image of the Valley of Roses—Wadi al-Ward, a historical landscape near Jerusalem where women once picked roses to make jam. In Kattan's poetry, this valley becomes a vanished utopia, a submerged space of memory, and simultaneously a poetic cipher for a different Palestinian narrative: not merely a site of violence, but a garden of possible return, of gentle magic, and of defiant tenderness. "Hortus conclusus" is thus a book of permeability—between earth and myth, between sarha (aimless wandering) and rootedness—that rejects conventional aesthetics of sacrifice and instead creates a Palestinian imaginarium of great density.

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Palestine, Wound and Dream: Karim Kattan

Karim Kattan's "L'Éden à l'aube" tells the story of a love affair in Palestine between Isaac and Gabriel, unfolding in a Jerusalem rife with political, religious, and social conflict. The novel oscillates between lyrical reverie and political reality, between mythical idealization and the brutality of everyday life. The text unfolds in a dreamlike narrative style, while simultaneously making the traces of colonial violence and territorial constraints unmistakable. Intriguingly, utopia and dystopia are not clearly separated in "L'Éden à l'aube." Rather, a hybridity emerges in which hope and destruction merge. Isaac, the potentially sacrificed son of Abraham, and Gabriel, the divine messenger, find themselves in a world teetering on the brink of paradise.

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Rentrée littéraire: contemporary French literature
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