Photo Credit: Jewish Press
Although Ludwig Bemelmans (1898-1962) is not a universally recognized name, one of his fictional creations is: Madeline, an indomitable little Parisian girl.
Although he was a hotelier and restaurateur; a cartoonist and illustrator of hundreds of magazine articles; a novelist, anthologist, and journalist; a theatrical designer and screenwriter (his best known work being Yolanda and the Thief); an advertising man (including a famous ad for Jell-O) and interior decorator, he achieved everlasting renown for his six Madeline books, the first of which was published in 1939 and was named a Caldecott Honor Book (1949).
Considered one of the leading classics of childrens literature for ages 3 to 8, the Madeline books have sold well over 10 million copies and spawned an entire merchandising industry. The first story was later adapted into a short animated film by United Productions of America (1952), which earned an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Short Film. A subsequent book, Madelines Rescue, earned a Caldecott Medal (1954) and a New York Times Outstanding Book of the Year designation.
Each Madeline story begins in identical fashion with a rhyming cadence well-known to generations of parents and their children for over 80 years:
In an old house in Paris,That was covered with vines,Lived twelve little girlsIn two straight lines.
The book tells the story of 12 little girls, the smallest and most adventurous of whom is Madeline, who live together in a boarding school in Paris under the supervision of Miss Clavel. Most critics claim the girls home is an orphanage and that Miss Clavel is a nun which is simply incorrect; in fact, in one story, Madeline receives a beautiful dollhouse from her father, which makes her the envy of the other 11 girls, and there is considerable evidence to support the proposition that Miss Clavel is, in fact, a nurse.
As Bemelmans tells it in the first Madeline book:
In the middle of one nightMiss Clavel turned on her lightand said, Something is not right!Little Madeline sat in bed,cried and cried her eyes were red.And soon after Dr. Cohncame, he rushed out to the phone,Nurse, he said, its an appendix!not a single eye was dry.Madeline was in his armin a blanket safe and warm.
Madelines surgery was successful, though she was left with a scar, and all the other girls wanted to have the same surgery so that they, too, could get toys and candy.
In his June 22, 1954 speech accepting his Caldecott Award, Bemelmans disclosed the origins of Madeline and said he purposely made Madelines doctor a Jewish physician and that he modeled Dr. Cohn after Lon Blum, the first Jewish prime minister of France.
The Madeline stories began to take shape during a family vacation in France when, while riding home on his bike, Bemelmans was struck by a car. While in the hospital having his injuries treated, a little girl who had an appendix operation stood up in bed and proudly displayed her scar to him.
He was apparently inspired by the tenderness of the doctor who treated the little girl. As he tells it, if you take a look at the book, you will see that the doctor who runs to Madelines bed is the great patriot and humanitarian Lon Blum. He was thinking specifically of Blums kindness and gentleness in describing Madeline being safe and warm in the doctors arms.
However, notwithstanding his affection for Blum, there is evidence that Bemelmans was an anti-Semite. Benno Weiser Varon, a leader of the Jewish community in Quito who knew Bemelmans well, declared that Bemelmans was a Jew-hater who, among other things, urged the Quito Tennis Club to exclude Jews. Varon, a fascinating character in his own right, served as editor of Quitos leading newspaper; played a crucial role in securing Ecuadors pivotal vote in favor of the UNSCOP partition plan for Eretz Yisrael; and served as Ecuadors first ambassador to Israel and later as Israels ambassador to Paraguay.
There are any number of other specifically Jewish characters in Bemelmans work. For example, in the humorous The Eye of God (1949), set during the Anschluss and World War II, he writes of a Jewish banker who has managed to buy his security with money and lies. In the hilarious When You Lunch with the Emperor (published posthumously in 2005), he draws on his experiences working his way up from busboy to waiter to banquet manager at the Ritz-Carlton hotel, and describes some of the entertaining characters and crazy scenes he saw along the way, including those at big Jewish weddings.
Moreover, Bemelmans agent, who was sometimes described as his ghost artist, was Ervine Metzl, the Chicago born son of Jewish immigrants from Bohemia. Metzl (1899-1963) was an American graphic artist and illustrator best known for his posters, including several still-famous posters he designed for the Chicago Transit Authority in the early 1920s, and postage stamp designs, including commemoratives for the first World Refugee Year, the Lincoln Sesquicentennial, and the 1960 Winter Olympics.
Readers may be interested in Avigail, a Jewish takeoff of the Madeline stories by Chana Zauderer and illustrated by Mary Abadi (Feldheim, 2015) in which four Jewish girls engage in various Jewish activities with the youngest, Avigail, always the last to do everything.
* * * * *
Distinguished lawyer, jurist, journalist, poet, drama critic, and political leader, Lon Blum (1872-1950) is perhaps best known for being the first Jew and the first socialist to become French Premier.
During his three terms, he forged closer relations with the United States, worked to suppress fascism, introduced a 40-hour work week and paid vacations for workers, nationalized the Bank of France and the war industries, and carried out an extensive program of social reform including, in classic socialist fashion, redistribution of the nations wealth.
After graduating the Sorbonne with the highest honors in law, Blum became close with French Socialist leader Jean Jaurs, which led to his joining the Socialist Party in 1899 and his later election to the prestigious Chamber of Deputies in 1919. When the party split in December 1920 with the Communists winning a majority, taking control of the machinery of government, including the national press, Blum became the unquestioned leader in the reconstruction of the Socialist Party.
After the 1934 Paris riots, which many consider to be the beginning of fascism in France, Blum began to work on the left-wing alliance that became the Front Populaire. In the 1936 elections, the Front won a large majority and Blum, its chief architect, became Premier. At the same time, his social reforms aroused the bitterness of French industrialists as well as the French right wing, which displayed pro-German tendencies and conducted a violent campaign of personal vilification against Blum tinged with anti-Semitism.
After the French collapse in 1940, Blum, refusing to flee he was in great danger as both a Jew and a Socialist bravely remained in France, where he was indicted by the Vichy government and brought to trial. His brilliant defense, however, so embarrassed the Nazis that they ordered the suspension of his trial; he was incarcerated for five years, first in Buchenwald and then in Dachau, before being freed by U.S. forces in May 1945. After World War II, he was again elected prime minister of France and became a respected elder statesman.
Exhibited here is a June 30, 1949 correspondence to Paul Angoulvent from Blum on his Le Populaire letterhead written as director of the Organe Central Du Parti Socialiste (the Central Organ of the Socialist Party) in which he sincerely and cordially acknowledges receipt of Angoulvents June 20th letter and for the works he was kind enough to forward.
Angoulvent (1899-1976) was a French publisher and Louvre museum curator who directed the University Presses of France beginning in 1934. After Frances liberation in 1944, he was convicted of ousting Pierre-Marcel Lvi, the Jewish director of his publishing house.
Blum was born into a Jewish family where his mother kept kosher, regularly lit Shabbat candles, and taught her children to recite prayers in Hebrew. He celebrated his bar mitzvah in synagogue, and the family regularly gathered together for the Jewish festivals. He remained observant early in his life, though he characterized Judaism as nothing more than a collection of superstitions observed without any conviction, simply out of respect for ancestors.
When he was admitted to an advanced French school, he brought kosher food with him and, on one occasion, his professor noted in his diary that Blum brought unleavened bread and meat prepared according to the Jewish rite. He married Jewish women three of them (his second wife was the sister of composer Paul Dukas, famous for The Sorcerers Apprentice) and the first wedding was held at the Grand Synagogue in Paris.
Like many of his countrymen, however, Blum later became wholly assimilated and non-observant, although he was always conscious of his Jewish origins something that French anti-Semites would later never let him forget.
Notwithstanding his assimilationist desire to become a successful socialite and to blend into the upper echelons of French society, Jewish issues played an important role in his life. His reporting on the infamous Dreyfus Affair was perhaps the formative event of his political life, and his strong support for Dreyfus resulted in a massive escalation of anti-Semitic allegations and activities against him.
The anti-Semitism against him only grew as he gained political power, and a most powerful tide of anti-Semitism was unleashed when he was elected premier in 1936 as leader of a Socialist government. Before his election, he was dragged out of his vehicle by an anti-Semitic group and nearly beaten to death and, upon his election, opposition leader Xavier Vallat took the floor of the Chamber of Deputies and made the following infamous statement:
Your coming to power is undoubtedly a historic event. For the first time this old Gallo-Roman country will be governed by a Jew. I dare say out loud what the country is thinking, deep inside: it is preferable for this country to be led by a man whose origins belong to his soil than by a cunning Talmudist.
Vallat further alleged that, rather than acting in the best interests of France, Blum would be making foreign policy only after consulting with his fellow Jews. With calls of death to the Jews!, the fascist right, which would later comprise the pro-Nazi Vichy French government, enthusiastically endorsed Vallats speech. Urging the Chamber of Deputies to take seriously the Protocols of the Elder of Zion the notorious and disgusting fake anti-Semitic screed it announced that the Government of Lon Blum puts the Jewish Question [sic] before the French people for the first time since the Dreyfus affair.
In response, Blum proudly acknowledged his Judaism and answered: I am a Jew. That is a fact [and] you do me no injury by reminding me of the race to which I belong and have never renounced and toward which I feel only gratitude and pride.
Sympathetic to Zionist aspirations, Blum was one of the founders of the Socialist Pro- Palestine Committee (August 1928), which formally expressed recognition of the achievements of the new Jewish commonwealth in Eretz Yisrael; resolved that Zionism based on work, on Socialist transformation and international solidarity, deserves the assistance of all Socialists; and cited the Biblical prophecy of Amos 9:15: They will never again be uprooted from the land I have given them.
A close friend of Chaim Weizmann, he accepted the Jewish leaders invitation to represent French Jewry in the Council of the Jewish Agency. He was also a strong supporter of Keren Hayesod and served as a member of the French Palestine Committee in Paris.
After World War II, Blum did not merely pay lip service in support of increased Jewish immigration to Eretz Yisrael, but rather championed the Zionist cause. Citing Herzls famous motto, If you will it, it is no dream, he publicly and dramatically declared the birth of the Jewish Commonwealth in Eretz Yisrael; assumed a leading role in influencing the French governments pro-Jewish vote on the United Nations decision on Palestine (1947); and was instrumental in preventing British diplomatic pressure from stopping the flow of Jewish illegal immigration from Central Europe through France to Eretz Yisrael.
Kfar Lon Blum, a settlement begun by the Labor Zionist Habonim on the banks of the Jordan River at the foot of Mount Hermon about four miles from Kiryat Shemoneh as a permanent memorial to Blum, was formally inaugurated on November 10, 1943 during a ceremony attended by representatives of the Jewish community of Eretz Yisrael and the French Committee of National Liberation.
Speakers included the French consul-general, who expressed his appreciation for the friendship extended by the Jews of Eretz Yisrael to France; Golda Meirson (later Meir), on behalf of the Histadrut; and Dr. Abraham Granovsky (Granot), a JNF director and later a signer of Israels declaration of Independence.
One of Blums greatest wishes went unfulfilled: he desperately wanted to be able to visit Eretz Yisrael and to see Kfar Blum, but it was not to be. In his adult life, Blum had nothing to do with Jewish practice, and so in his death: in disregard of Jewish law, he was buried at the Montmartre Cemetery in Paris on the first day of Passover after a non-Jewish funeral service.
See the original post:
Ludwig Bemelmans' Madeline And The Jewish Connection To Lon Blum - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com
- Designers Say These Trends Will Go Out of Style in 2025Here Are Some to Try Instead - Real Simple - December 21st, 2024 [December 21st, 2024]
- 8 Decorating Trends Designers Wish Would Go Away in 2025 - Veranda - December 21st, 2024 [December 21st, 2024]
- Designer Tips for the Year Ahead - Designlines Magazine - December 21st, 2024 [December 21st, 2024]
- The Best Coffee Table Books to Gift This Year, According to AD Staffers - Architectural Digest - December 21st, 2024 [December 21st, 2024]
- Journey Through the Spectacular Interiors of Katherine Bryan - Galerie Magazine - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- 26 Chic Target Products That Will Make People Think You Hired An Interior Designer - BuzzFeed - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Designing with purpose: Mehnaz Khan uses color psychology to transform spaces, minds - Times Union - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- 7 gift ideas for Tampa Bay hosts this season - Tampa Bay Times - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- An interior designer shares 10 things she would never have in her own living room - Business Insider - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Color of the Year 2025: These Are the Colors Paint Companies Predict Will Rule Interiors - Architectural Digest - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- 9 Home Trends Designers Can't Wait To Leave Behind In 2025 - Southern Living - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- This Cozy Home In The Forests Of France Is Natural Design At Its Best - mindbodygreen - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- 5 Home Trends That Are Cringe-Worthy (But You Probably Have Them) - Brit + Co - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Rivals Delights in How the Other Half Lives (and Sleeps) - IndieWire - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- 15 Dark Green Paint Colors That Set a Soothing Atmosphere - House Beautiful - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Ten Interior Design Trends From Dallas's Biggest Decor Event of the Year - Texas Monthly - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- This Living Room's Sofa Was Inspired by One in a Parisian Chanel Store - Veranda - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- A spare room so pretty and charming that youll wonder why yours isnt as perfect - Country Life - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- A Seat in This Aubergine Room Is the Hottest Reservation in Town - Veranda - October 28th, 2024 [October 28th, 2024]
- I'm an interior decorator. Here are 8 things I would never get at West Elm. - Business Insider - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- AD PROs 2025 Interior Design Forecast Is Almost HereRegister Now for the Virtual Reveal - Architectural Digest - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Property from the collection of Robert Couturier: 'I love the life of objects and their stories, but I have never wanted to be limited by them' -... - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Inside Two of the Most Incredible Homes I've Ever Seen - Harper's BAZAAR - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Interior Decorators Shared The Things They Would Never Do In Their Own Homes And You May Be Guilty Of A Few Of These - Yahoo Lifestyle UK - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Dollar Tree shoppers are clearing shelves for $5 fall floral decoration thats identical to Michaels but 8... - The US Sun - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Ral Bravo: From Real Madrid to Leeds United... to getting up at 5.30am for career as interior designer - Sport Witness - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Savor This Restaurant Embracing The Bright Palette Of Southern Italy - Interior Design - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Exclusive | Justin Timberlake was out with pal, celebrity interior decorator Estee Stanley night of DUI arrest - Page Six - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Here's How Designers & Design Businesses are Supporting Hurricane Helene Relief - Veranda - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- The Best Artificial Christmas Trees, According to People Whose Taste We Trust - New York Magazine - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- 6 Things Interior Decorators Never Do In Their Own Homes - HuffPost - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- How an Aussie interior designer made a new life in the Cotswolds - The Times - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen Find a Home for The Row in Paris - Vogue - September 29th, 2024 [September 29th, 2024]
- Interior-design experts share the 12 kitchen trends you'll probably regret in a few years - Business Insider - September 7th, 2024 [September 7th, 2024]
- How to Decorate with Cosmic Cobalt, According to Designers - Veranda - September 7th, 2024 [September 7th, 2024]
- How to find the perfect interior designer or decorator for your dream home makeover - Yahoo Life - August 25th, 2024 [August 25th, 2024]
- Chatting with the Interior Designer of the 2024 St. Jude Dream Home - WSET - August 25th, 2024 [August 25th, 2024]
- 22 Brooklyn Interior Designers to Know From the AD PRO Directory - Architectural Digest - August 25th, 2024 [August 25th, 2024]
- We Asked Interior Designers To Share Their Favorite Fall Decor Picks, Starting At $10 - Southern Living - August 25th, 2024 [August 25th, 2024]
- Wendy Glaister is named a finalist for HGTVs Design of the Year - EIN News - August 25th, 2024 [August 25th, 2024]
- The House That Saved the 2024 Kips Bay Decorator Show House Dallas - PaperCity Magazine - August 17th, 2024 [August 17th, 2024]
- 6 Things Interior Designers Say They Would Never Buy - Southern Living - August 17th, 2024 [August 17th, 2024]
- 30 New Design Books That Are Worth Adding to Your Cart ASAP - Veranda - August 17th, 2024 [August 17th, 2024]
- 6 Clever Design Ideas Worth Revisiting From This Seasons Decorator Show Houses - Architectural Digest - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- You can pay to put a virtual house on Snapchats map - The Verge - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- The Tool an Interior Decorator Uses to Hang Pictures Easily | The Strategist - New York Magazine - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- 5 Old Decorating Ideas We Wish They'd Bring Back - Architectural Digest - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- What Not to Miss at the Inaugural Design Miami Los Angeles - Architectural Digest - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- Why the 'Granny Flat' Is the Next Big Home Amenity - Architectural Digest - May 18th, 2024 [May 18th, 2024]
- SKITTLES LITTLES: Don't Just Taste The Rainbow Live In It With New Space Designed By Interior Decorator Dani Klaric - Culturess - May 6th, 2024 [May 6th, 2024]
- See Every Room Inside the Kips Bay Decorator Show House New York 2024 - Architectural Digest - May 6th, 2024 [May 6th, 2024]
- Im a top New Jersey interior designer items you shouldnt spend too much on & my go-to spots to shop on... - The Sun - May 6th, 2024 [May 6th, 2024]
- Skittles Is Giving Fans the Chance to Live in This Colorful Micro-Apartment Rent-Free for a Year - Yahoo Lifestyle Australia - May 6th, 2024 [May 6th, 2024]
- The 12 Cringiest Home Decor Trends, According to YouTubers and TikTokers - Architectural Digest - April 8th, 2024 [April 8th, 2024]
- Home Design Trends That Need To Make A Comeback - BuzzFeed - April 8th, 2024 [April 8th, 2024]
- 23 Best Austin Interior Designers on the AD PRO Directory - Architectural Digest - April 8th, 2024 [April 8th, 2024]
- This neglected 1840s townhouse had been a run-down rental for over 40 years | - Homes & Gardens - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- This Interior Designer's Own Apartment is Elegant and Luxurious Yet Surprisingly "Life-Proof" Too - LivingEtc - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- 9 Kitchen Design Trends to Leave Behind in 2023, According to Interior Designers - Yahoo Life - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- "You Dey Active Everywhere": Lady Who's a Tailor, Caterer, Event Planner, Interior Decorator Trends - Legit.ng - December 11th, 2023 [December 11th, 2023]
- Sex Story: The Divorce Who Wants to Seduce Her Trainer - The Cut - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- You'd Never Guess Where This Renter's "Secret" Storage Spot Is - Yahoo Life - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Montgomery County Retired Teachers Association - Journal Review - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Designers Can't Get Enough of These Interior Paint Color Trends for ... - Southern Living - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Meet the professional Christmas tree decorator who makes 2k to pay for her entire festive season - Yahoo Lifestyle UK - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- 10 LGBTQ+ Designers Who Could Replace Bobby Berk On 'Queer Eye' - Yahoo News - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- This Emily Henderson-approved bedroom is endlessly cozy | - Homes & Gardens - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Kourtney Kardashian's dining room reinvents the gallery wall | - Homes & Gardens - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Does a living room need a coffee table? Experts weigh in | - Homes & Gardens - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Do you need curtains? Designers explain when you can go without ... - Homes & Gardens - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- The history of the folding screen unfolds in a Milan exhibition - Financial Times - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Mary Fitzgerald Is the Heart of 'Selling Sunset' Season 7 - Collider - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Inside the Superyacht Princess Diana Vacationed on With Dodi Fayed - ELLE Decor - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- ABC home renovation show set to outclass The Block and Dream ... - The New Daily - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- 6 things we want to see in Grand Theft Auto 6 - Stuff - November 16th, 2023 [November 16th, 2023]
- Interior Designer vs. Interior Decorator: Whats The Difference? - March 24th, 2023 [March 24th, 2023]
- Online Interior Decorator School | Penn Foster - March 24th, 2023 [March 24th, 2023]
- Public procurement: Share of goods bought from MSMEs hits new high in FY23; benefits this many sellers - The Financial Express - March 24th, 2023 [March 24th, 2023]
- Taylor Swift's House Has a Koi Pond, But She Really Wanted Stingrays - Showbiz Cheat Sheet - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- 'Feud: Capote's Women': How Does the Cast Compare to Their Real-Life Counterparts? (PHOTOS) - TV Insider - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]