Bella Chagall
Bella Chagall
CHAGALL, BELLA ROSENFELD (1895–1944), writer and wife of artist Marc *Chagall. Bella was born in Vitebsk, White Russia, the youngest of eight children of Shmuel Noah and Alta Rosenfeld. Her parents, owners of a successful jewelry business, were members of the ?asidic community and conducted their family life according to Jewish tradition. However, they also sought out secular education and opportunities for their children. Chagall, who was educated in Russian language schools, became a student in the Faculty of Letters at the University of Moscow in her teens; she was particularly interested in theater and art, and as a university student, she contributed articles to a Moscow newspaper. In 1909, while visiting friends in St. Petersburg, she met Marc Chagall; their attraction was instantaneous and they were soon engaged. Although both were from Vitebsk, their social worlds were far apart and the Rosenfelds were unhappy with the engagement. The couple finally married in 1915 and their only child, Ida, was born the next year. In 1922, Marc Chagall moved his family to France. Bella was a constant subject in her husband's art, often represented as a beloved bride. The Chagalls fled to the United States following the outbreak of World War II, arriving in New York in 1941. Bella Chagall died in 1944 in the United States, apparently of a viral infection. Bella Chagall's literary work included the editing and translation of her husband's 1922 autobiography from Russian into French (Ma Vie, 1931; Eng. trans., My Life, 1960). Her major work, Burning Lights (Brenendike Likht), written in Yiddish in France in 1939, was published posthumously in English in 1946. Chagall said that her visits to Jewish communities in Palestine in 1931 and Vilna in 1935 prompted her to write in Yiddish, her "faltering mother tongue." In Burning Lights, Chagall arranges her reminiscences according to the calendar and observances of the Jewish year. Writing in the voice of her childhood self, Basha, she places female experience at the center of her luminous narrative. Chagall's selective portrait of her well-to-do urban family, living among and employing gentiles, successful in business, religiously active, and communally philanthropic, contrasts with contemporaneous depictions of the contained and impoverished Jewish life of the East European shtetl. A great part of the genius of Brenendike Likht is Chagall's ability to convey simultaneously the timelessness of traditional Jewish life and a dark foreboding prompted by the existential reality of East European Jewry in the 1930s. A second posthumous autobiographical volume, First Encounter, was published in 1983. Source: [Encyclopaedia Judaica][1] [1]: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0004_0_04128.html
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Featured books
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- Image source: Open LibraryBL
Brenendiḳe likhṭ
cover - Image source: Open LibraryGO
Lumières allumées
cover - Image source: Open LibraryC
Chagall
cover - Image source: Open LibraryFE
First Encounter
cover - Image source: Open LibraryEB
Erste Begegnung
cover - Image source: Open LibraryVH
Voor het Eerst...
cover - Image source: Open LibraryWS
Waarom Staan die Kaarsjes Daar...?
cover - Image source: Open LibraryBL
Brennende Lichter.
cover - Image source: Open LibraryBL
Burning lights
cover - Image source: Open LibraryBL
Burning lights
cover - ГОГорящие огниBella Chagall
Горящие огни
no cover - GSGori︠a︡shchie svetilʹnikiBella Chagall
Gori︠a︡shchie svetilʹniki
no cover - BLBrenendike likht (Steven Spielb...Bella Chagall
Brenendike likht (Steven Spielberg digital Yiddish library)
no cover - PEPrimer EncuentroBella Chagall
Primer Encuentro
no cover - NDNerot dolḳim u-feraḳim nivḥa...Bella Chagall
Nerot dolḳim u-feraḳim nivḥarim min ha-sefer ha-Pegishah ha-rishonah
no cover - NDNerot dolḳimBella Chagall
Nerot dolḳim
no cover - NDNerot dolḳim u-peraḳim nivḥarim...Bella Chagall
Nerot dolḳim u-peraḳim nivḥarim min ha-sefer ha-pegishah ha-rishonah
no cover - DEdi Ershte bagegenishBella Chagall
Di ershte bagegenish
no cover - BLBrenendike likhtBella Chagall
Brenendike likht
no cover - בלברענענדיקע ליכטBella Chagall
ברענענדיקע ליכט
no cover
Works in catalog
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- Open Work
Brenendiḳe likhṭ
- Open Work
Lumières allumées
- Open Work
Chagall
- Open Work
First Encounter
- Open Work
Erste Begegnung
- Open Work
Voor het Eerst...
- Open Work
Waarom Staan die Kaarsjes Daar...?
- Open Work
Brennende Lichter.
- Open Work
Burning lights
- Open Work
Burning lights
- Open Work
Горящие огни
- Open Work
Gori︠a︡shchie svetilʹniki
- Open Work
Brenendike likht (Steven Spielberg digital Yiddish library)
- Open Work
Primer Encuentro
- Open Work
Nerot dolḳim u-feraḳim nivḥarim min ha-sefer ha-Pegishah ha-rishonah
- Open Work
Nerot dolḳim
- Open Work
Nerot dolḳim u-peraḳim nivḥarim min ha-sefer ha-pegishah ha-rishonah
- Open Work
Di ershte bagegenish
- Open Work
Brenendike likht
- Open Work
ברענענדיקע ליכט
