The tiny studio which is one of four in a space that Avraham (Avi) Vofsi shares with three other artists in Jerusalem’s bustling Talpiot Industrial Zone belies the extent of his creative talent. Although he started out as a documentary filmmaker and writer, he prefers to be known as an oil painter. On entering the confined area, the eye is immediately drawn to two massive portraits that look more like photographs than paintings. One is of a woman, the other of a male soldier. Both are so lifelike that one can almost feel their presence – and one has to look very hard to see a brush stroke. These paintings and smaller landscapes that Vofsi has painted during his travels around the country in the aftermath of October 7 have contributed to the strengthening of his Jewish identity.

Born in Melbourne, Australia, to American immigrant parents, Vofsi, 34, had very little to do with the Jewish community during his growing-up period. The family, though fully Jewish, lived in an outlying neighborhood in which there were very few Jews. Even when they moved to another neighborhood in which there were more Jews, they didn’t socialize with them.

Although there are several Jewish day schools in Melbourne, Vofsi went to a regular state school, where his friends were non-Jews. When he was old enough to date, most of the girls he dated were not Jewish.

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