Among the 12 murdered in the Paris attack on the editorial offices of Charlie Hebdo is the Tunis-born, 80-year-old French-Jewish cartoonist, Georges Wolinski, the Forward reports: (With thanks: Michelle)
Georges Wolinski (pictured) was the subject of his wife Maryse Wolinski’s 2012 memoir, “George,
If You Only Knew.”
According to Benjamin Ivry, writing for
the Forward on January 4, 2012, “Wolinski was born in Tunis to Lola
Bembaron, a Tunisian Jew, and Siegfried Wolinski, a Polish Jew. The
latter, fleeing Europe’s pogroms, settled in Tunisia to open a wrought
iron manufacturing business. In 1936 Siegfried Wolinski would be
murdered by a disgruntled ex-employee, and although Georges was only a
toddler at the time, he tells his wife today: “The ghost of my father
has haunted me all my life.”
The younger Wolinski later sought
solace in the Tunis pastry shop, Chez les nègres, owned by his maternal
grandfather; he also ogled the city’s less family-friendly prostitutes’
quarter Sid Abdel Aguèche. In 1946, his surviving family moved to
France, where Wolinski graduated from art school. Stationed during his
French military service in Reggane, Algeria, a remote town in the Sahara
Desert, Wolinski there admired poster art by the French artist of
Polish Jewish origin Roland Topor, advertising a satirical magazine,
“Hara-Kiri.”
Wolinski would soon become a friend and colleague of
Topor in the pages of “Hara-Kiri” and subsequent publications. He also
never abandoned his Jewish identity, providing knowing drawings for the
French version of Dan Greenburg’s 1965 international bestseller, “How to
be a Jewish Mother: a very lovely training manual.” Whatever the
French-language version, “Comment devenir une mère juive en dix leçons,”
from Les éditions Seghers may have lost in translation, it gained
immeasurably by the witty visual inspirations of Wolinski.
Wolinski
collaborated on a 2007 book with the Algerian-born French attorney
Pierre-Philippe Barkats, “Thanks, Hanukkah Harry” in which the title
hero valiantly faces down climate change and other ecological crises.
The University of Melbourne hosted a 2012 tribute exhibit devoted to his
early inspiration, Topor, and Wolinski himself has also become
something of a modern-day classic.
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Babarians have done their dirty job!
ReplyDeletesultana
I am sorry to say that some are reall shitty, jealous and dirt
ReplyDeletesumtana