Research Catalog

Amélie : the story of Lady Jakobovits

Title
Amélie : the story of Lady Jakobovits / Gloria Tessler.
Author
Tessler, Gloria.
Publication
London ; Portland, OR : Valentine Mitchell, 1999.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance BM755.J279 T47 1999Off-site

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Details

Description
318 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations; 25 cm
Summary
  • A child in war-torn Europe, Amelie Munk fled for her life with her mother, grandmother and younger siblings on a packed train from Paris bound for the south of France. In unfamiliar territory near Toulouse Amelie was told to find a bike and seek out her father, Rabbi Elie Munk, who had joined the Foreign Legion.
  • Yet as the threat to Jews grew daily more ominous, the Munks became a Jewish Swiss Family Robinson, winning love and admiration for their quiet courage, intrepid humour and rich philosophical optimism. Yet the coup de grace came when - minutes from Switzerland and safety - the cries of her baby brother alerted the border guards to the presence of the terrified Jewish family.
  • Life changed for Amelie after the war, when, still a teenager, she married the man destined to become the Chief Rabbi. From the poverty of an embattled existence on the streets of Marseilles, Amelie transformed into that rare combination - sophisticated woman-of-the-world and Jewish revivalist - rubbing shoulders with royalty and the political elite.
  • Her husband, Chief Rabbi Jakobovits, was an adviser to the Margaret Thatcher government: chosen neither for politics nor faith, but his earthier sense of personal and social responsibility.
  • In her own right Amelie became a luminary of many charities and a speaker and educator on the talmudic and moral issues close to her heart. When Lord Jakobovits was created a Peer of the Realm by the then prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, Amelie Jakobovits became icon of another kind, and is now regarded with general affection as Lady J.
Subjects
Note
  • Includes index.
ISBN
  • 0853033404 (cloth)
  • 0853033412 (pbk.)
LCCN
98043095
OCLC
ocm39923227
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries