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Art of a Jewish Woman The True Story of How a Penniless Holocaust Escapee Became an Influential Modern Art Connoisseur by Henry Massie
Publisher: books Bnimble (November 19, 2013) Publication Date: November 19, 2013 Language: English ASIN: B0079Q0HU6 First she escaped the Holocaust and the poverty of the shtetl. After that, she moved in many worlds. And in every one she made her mark. Art of a Jewish Woman is a memoir and biography of Massie's mother, a brilliant and beautiful woman who escaped the Holocaust and participated in many of the most critical periods of the 20th Century. One part historical biography, weaving World War II era European cultural relationships with the history of Modern Art, and one part inspirational romance, it paints a vivid portrait of Felice as an indomitable spirit, her boldness and resilience a beacon of hope. Excerpt: Inside the stone building, a British officer examined passenger's travel documents. When Felice's turn came, the crisply uniformed colonel looked at her bare shoulders and her short beige and cream linen dress. A marriage certificate issued the day before by a rabbi in Beirut said they were husband and wife. The man looked malnourished. He had a red beard and long ear-locks, and large spectacles covered his face. His black suit was all dusty, and his head was covered with a large Hassidic black fedora. The couple did not speak to each other. The colonel was under orders to do his part at the border to stop the flow of illegal immigrants into Palestine. He asked Felice first in English, which she didn't know, then in French, "Are the two of you married?" "Yes, of course," she answered him. "What language do you have in common?" he continued, probing the ruse. But Felice and her newly certificated husband had no language in common. He spoke Arabic and Hebrew, and she Polish, French, German, Yiddish, and some Russian. "The Language of love," she said in perfect melodious French, not missing a beat, flirting with the colonel. He stamped her entry visa. Sharing Widget |