But the "Generation of the State" writers have now also passed on the literary baton. Some younger writers, now in their forties, such as David Grossman, Meir Shalev, and Yehoshua Kenaz, continue to have a major influence on the local literary scene, and they too are published abroad. An important phenomenon of recent local writing is the predominance of women, whose voice was relatively unheard during the early years of the state. These include Shulamith Hareven, Amalia Kahana-Carmon, Shulamit Lapid, Batya Gur, and the poets Dahlia Ravikovich and the late Yona Wallach.
We are now witness to yet another generation of writers, this time of a very different nature. Gone are the old concerns of nation building, absorption of new immigrants, the heroic cast of the pioneers of the kibbutzim, the melting pot, existentialist concerns for the future of the country. In its place is a new brand of less spiritual concerns - the good life, the pursuit of happiness, the debunking of hitherto "sacred" causes - often in a surrealistic, anarchic, iconoclastic, and at times even nihilistic, literary style. The things that matter to these writers are no longer the causes over which their parents agonized, but the same things that concern their fellow writers in Paris, London or New York. Such writers include Yehudit Katzir, Orly Kastel-Blum, Etgar Keret, Irit Linor, Gadi Taub and several others, all of whom might be loosely termed the "Post-Zionist Generation."
As we have seen, Israel's cultural founding fathers and mothers perceived a national imperative in creating one society where ethnic individuality and varied cultural backgrounds would be subsumed within a homogenous "Israeli" society. That perception is very much a thing of the past. Israel is a multi-cultural society, and it is now accepted that the country stands only to benefit from retaining cultural individuality while striving to achieve a parallel Israeli culture which will absorb and be enriched by the manifold strands that make up the whole. Israel is still a country of immigrants - from 1989 to 1996 alone, well over 600,000 immigrants arrived from the countries of the former Soviet Union, and some 60,000 continue to arrive every year. In "Operation Moses" of 1984-1986 and "Operation Solomon" of 1991, over 30,000 Jews arrived from Ethiopia. All of these, in addition to thousands of other immigrants from all over the world, have increased the population of the country by over 12 percent in six years - comparable to the United States taking in over 30 million people in the equivalent amount of time!
The arrival of over half a million people from the former Soviet Union has had a critical impact on Israel's cultural life in all its facets, but none more than in the field of music. (The standard joke at the height of the last wave of immigration was that if a Russian immigrant coming off the plane did not have a violin case tucked under his arm, he was probably a pianist.) The country has seen a proliferation of new orchestras, chamber music groups, choirs and soloists, and no less important, music education in the country has been immeasurably enriched. There is not a school or community center in the country that does not have its own group of musicians playing or singing under the watchful eye and ear of a Russian-speaking teacher. It seems probable that the next few years will see young musicians, whether born in Israel or abroad, who have been tutored by immigrants from the former Soviet Union, joining the select band of Israeli soloists such as Yitzhak Perlman, Pinhas Zuckerman, Daniel Barenboim and Shlomo Mintz, who have made a mark on the stages of concert halls all over the world.
Opera always had its adherents in Israel, even in the early days of the state. The Tel Aviv Opera mounted operas in a variety of tongues and even gave a start to a promising young Spanish tenor called Placido Domingo. But opera received a tremendous fillip from the massive Russian immigration and with the opening in 1995 of the magnificent Opera House in Tel Aviv's new Golda Center for the Performing Arts.