Photo de l'auteur

Violette Shamash (1912–2006)

Auteur de Memories of Eden: A Journey Through Jewish Baghdad

2 oeuvres 27 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

Œuvres de Violette Shamash

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1912
Date de décès
2006-03-21
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Iraq
Lieu de naissance
Baghdad, Iraq
Lieux de résidence
Baghdad, Iraq
London, England, UK
Professions
memoirist
Courte biographie
Violette Shamash was born in Baghdad, Iraq and had a privileged childhood and young adulthood with her extended family. Her book Memories of Eden: A Journey Through Jewish Baghdad, is a first-person account of daily life first under Ottoman, then British, and finally pro-Nazi rule. The Jews of Iraq were brutally attacked in the Farhud, the two-day pogrom that took place in Baghdad in 1941.

Membres

Critiques

Violette Shamash was born in the last years of the Ottoman Empire into one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world, which at that time made up 40% of the population of Baghdad.

The book has been complied from notes and writings that she made for her children and grandchildren, and she writes a lot about daily life during her childhood - playing games with her cousins, walking to school through the bustling souk, preparing for the High Holy Days. Their milkmaid brings a cow to the house and milks her on the doorstep; their seamstress stays in the house for a month at a time.

In the 1930s, Violette is in her early 20s, and Baghdad is developing. The first department store opens - selling Bally shoes and Petit Bateau children's clothes! Even more exciting, Violette spends 1933 and 1934 in Palestine visiting her sister, enjoying sea-bathing (in Baghdad, women were only just stopping wearing the veil in public), flirting with young men, and buying her first proper bra ("a revelation - until then bras had not been made to enhance bosoms but rather to flatten them by tying them down").

At the same time, however, the anti-semitic propaganda coming out of Europe is finding a ready audience in Iraq, and eventually undermines the distant, but not hostile, relationship between the communities. This leads to the Farhud, a terrible attack in 1941 which marked the beginning of the end for the Jewish community. Violette and her family emigrate almost immediately afterwards. Her description of spending the two days hiding out in different locations, listening to the chaos overtaking the city, is vivid and terrifying.

Recommended for: a fascinating glimpse into life in Baghdad in the early years of the twentieth century.
… (plus d'informations)
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2 voter
Signalé
wandering_star | Dec 26, 2009 |

Prix et récompenses

Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
27
Popularité
#483,027
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
1
ISBN
3