Nobel literature laureate Guenter Grass, best known around the world for his novel "The Tin Drum," has died, his publisher said Monday. He was 87.
Grass
died in a clinic in the city of Luebeck, where he was taken over the
weekend, said Steidl publishing spokeswoman Claudia Glenewinkel. German
media are reporting he died of pneumonia.
Grass
focused in much of his work on learning from the horror of war and
genocide by exploring motifs from his childhood city of Danzig, which is
now Gdansk, Poland.
During the Nazi
era, ethnic Poles and Jews were persecuted and deported from the
multicultural city, at a time when they faced the possibility of mass
murder.
"In his excavation of the past,
Günter Grass goes deeper than most and he unearths the intertwined
roots of good and evil," the Nobel committee wrote, when it awarded him
the literature prize in 1999.
Controversy: Waffen SS, Israel
But Grass, an outspoken public figure, has sparked controversy in the last decade.
In
2006, he confessed that at the age of 15, in 1943, he volunteered for
military service in Germany's war of aggression and ended up in the
notoriously bloody Waffen SS.
Grass
said he had no excuses for his choices back then, and that, as a teen,
he may even have been excited about belonging to the unit, which he saw
then as an elite group.
A year later, he penned a detailed account in The New Yorker on how he spent his war years up to the death of German dictator Adolf Hitler.
Three years ago, Grass drew controversy again, when he published a poem in a German newspaper discouraging Germany from selling more submarines to Israel.
In
"What must be said," Grass accused Germany of selling weapons to a
potential aggressor out of guilt over the Holocaust. Grass said Israel
could use nuclear weapons to kill masses of Iranians.
German commentators pilloried him as subconsciously anti-Semitic.
Israel invoked a visa ban, and then-Interior Minister Eli Yishai declared Grass a "persona non grata" in Israel, the Jerusalem Post reported.
Literary innovator
Grass' novel characters are the forgotten, the downtrodden and the weird, the Nobel committee said. And like Oskar Matzerath, the boy in "The Tin Drum," they often slip into surreal situations.
This
was a literary innovation, the committee said, which was furthered by
other great authors, such as Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Nadine Gordimer and
Salman Rushdie.
On Monday, Rushdie tweeted about Grass' death: "This is very sad. A true giant, inspiration, and friend."
"The Tin Drum," which was published in
1959, "breaks the bounds of realism by having as its protagonist and
narrator an infernal intelligence in the body of a three-year-old, a
monster who overpowers the fellow human beings he approaches with the
help of a toy drum," the Nobel committee wrote.
The
committee praised Grass' mastery of the German language and his ability
to artfully exploit its possibilities of creating seemingly endless yet
graceful sentences.
Grass was an icon
in contemporary German culture with an unchanging iconic look -- his
broad mustache, his eyes gazing over the top of his glasses, a tobacco
pipe a constant companion in hand.
In his later years, he became known for his continuing critique of human history in the 20th century -- and of current events.
Criticizing PEGIDA
As
recently as March, Grass criticized the anti-Islam movement PEGIDA,
Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West. He used the
opportunity fire a jab at government that he said was corrupted by money
interests.
"It's not Islam that threatens the Federal Republic (of Germany)," he said in an interview with rp-online.de, "but political lobbying. Democracy has decayed into fake democracy."
Grass
has also suggested that Germans should be forced to invite refugees
from crisis regions to live in their homes as a way of offering more
shelter to the world's destitute.
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