32. The one exception, Aharon Megged′s High Season(1967), only confirms the general rule: “The play begins where the biblical story ends,” says Chaim Shoham, in his study Challenge and Reality in Israeli Drama(Ramat Gan: Bar-Ilan University, 1975), p.139.Megged does not engage in the ideational or dramatic potentials of the Book of Job, but composes an allegorical postscript, an additional act that reflects the topical issues of the sixties: “the question of our relationship with Germany, our right to demand justice after receiving reparations, and the problems of the Jewish return to Germany of a minority that refuses to learn the lessons of the past” (ibid.; my translation).(Cf.Ofrat, Israeli Drama,pp.162–171.)