Misha: A Mémoire of the Holocaust Years

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Misha: A Mémoire of the Holocaust Years
Author Misha Defonseca/Monique de Wael
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) World War II, The Holocaust
Publisher Mt. Ivy Press
Publication date 1997
ISBN ISBN 978-0963525772

Misha: A Mémoire of the Holocaust Years is a book by Misha Defonseca, first published in 1997. The book was originally claimed to be a memoir telling the true story of how the author survived The Holocaust as a young Jewish girl, wandering Europe searching for her deported parents. The book sold well in several countries and was made into a movie, Survivre Avec les Loups (Surviving with the Wolves), named after the claim that Misha was adopted by a pack of wolves during her journey who protected her.

However, in February 2008, Defonseca publicly admitted what many had already suspected, that her memoir was false. Her real name was Monique de Wael; while her parents were in fact taken away by the Nazis, they were not Jews but Catholic members of the Belgian Resistance, and she did not leave her home during the war to find them, as the book depicts. In a statement released through her lawyers to the Brussels newspaper Le Soir Defonseca/de Wael said that the story of "Misha" "is not actual reality, but was my reality, my way of surviving" and that there were moments when she "found it difficult to differentiate between what was real and what was part of my imagination."[1]

Contents

[edit] The true Monique de Wael

It is difficult to be sure of de Wael's true history, since it was obscured for so long behind the false story de Wael told. However, at least a fragmentary version can be put together from documentation turned up by researchers and from de Wael's own admissions.

Monique de Wael was born in 1937 in Etterbeek, Belgium to Robert De Wael and Josephine Donvil. The exact date is given differently by different sources: May 12 (according to a baptismal record)[2] or September 2 (according to records from the school Monique attended in the year 1943-44.)[3] Her family was not Jewish but Catholic, and her parents were members of the Belgian resistance, which led to them being arrested by the Nazis on September 23, 1941.[3] Nazi records indicate that Robert de Wael was executed on May 3 or 4 of 1944, and Donvil died sometime between February 1 and December 31 of 1945.[3]

According to de Wael's February 2008 statement, her guardianship went first to her grandfather Ernest de Wael, and then to her uncle Maurice de Wael. De Wael says that other than her grandfather, those who took her in treated her badly, including calling her "the traitor's daughter" because her father was suspected of having given information under torture in St. Gilles prison.[2] She remained with her uncle's family, and did not go off in search of her missing parents as "Misha" did, but according to her statement, this time with her uncle's family was when she began to "feel Jewish" and to fantasize about going off with the wolves.[1]

[edit] The book

By the late 1980s, de Wael was living in Massachusetts in the United States under the name of "Misha Defonseca". She was telling the fictional story of Misha to people as her own real life, including presenting it to the congregation of a Holliston synagogue on Holocaust Memorial Day as her own experience of the Holocaust.

The fictional "Misha" is eight when her parents were taken away (unlike de Wael, who was four.) Before their deportation, her parents place her with a Catholic family, who give her the pseudonym "Monique de Wael" (the author's real name). When this family treats her cruelly, Misha goes off in search of her parents, walking through Europe and living by stealing food, clothing and shoes. At a time when she faces starvation in a forest, she is adopted by wolves, becoming a feral child. Protected by the pack, she survives by eating offal and worms.[4] All in all, she treks over 1,900 miles through Europe, from Belgium to the Ukraine, through the Balkans and Germany and Poland (where she sneaks in and out of the Warsaw Ghetto), to Italy by boat and back to Belgium through France. Before the war is over, Misha has taken human life to survive, stabbing to death with a pocket knife a rapist German Nazi soldier who attacks her.[5]

When Jane Daniel, the owner of a small publishing company, Mt. Ivy Press, heard of Misha's dramatic and supposedly true story, she signed Defonseca to write a memoir of her experiences, with Vera Lee, a friend of Daniel's, as co-writer. The book was published in April 1997, and sold only around 5,000 copies in the United States, but was optioned for a film by The Walt Disney Company. Disney declined to make the film, however, in part because of legal difficulties:[5][6] by 1998, Defonseca and Lee had brought a lawsuit against Daniel, alleging that Daniel had failed to market the book properly in the US and had failed to give the co-authors their proper share of overseas royalties. In 2001 a jury awarded Defonseca and Lee over $10 million; a judge's decision later tripled the amount to over $32 million. The rights to the book were also awarded to Defonseca.[6]

The European print and film rights were separate from Defonseca's contract with Daniel and Mt. Ivy Press. The book became a bestseller in France, selling over 30,000 copies, and Defonseca toured France to promote it; in Italy the book sold even better, selling over 37,000 copies.[5] French film rights were sold to French Jewish filmmaker Véra Belmont and the resulting movie, Survivre avec des loups, opened in Belgium in late 2007.

[edit] Exposure

Doubts about the truthfulness of the book surfaced early on, even before the book was published. At least two people who were asked by the publisher to contribute blurbs for the book instead warned the publisher that the story was not true.[2] One of them, Lawrence L. Langer (a 1991 winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism, for his book Holocaust Testimonies: The Ruins of Memory) consulted Holocaust scholar Raul Hilberg, who also thought the story impossible.[5] A third, Bette Greene, asked for her blurb to be removed because she found the book unbelievable.[7] As early as 1996, questions of authenticity were being aired publicly, for instance by Henryk M. Broder in der Spiegel: "Fälschung oder nicht Fälschung, das ist hier die Frage. Bis auf den "Kompaß" liegt kein sachlicher Beweis vor. Und alle Zeugen, die Mishas Geschichte bestätigen könnten, sind entweder tot oder verschwunden." ("Falsehood or not a falsehood, that is the question here. Aside from [the existence of a compass allegedly used by Misha] no objective proof exists. And all witnesses who could confirm Misha's story are either dead or disappeared.")[8]

Even Defonseca's co-author Lee had doubts, leading her to consult Facing History and Ourselves, a nonprofit educational organization which helps to guide how the Holocaust is studied in schools. According to Lee, when the organization's representative told her that the story she was describing was impossible, she tried to bring her concerns to Daniel, only to be rebuffed.[5] When she was told that Defonseca had burned diaries from her teens in which she had written down her story, because the French version of her book had told her story so completely, Lee was surprised because she had never been told of the existence of these diaries, much less been given access to them to assist in writing the book.[5] Nevertheless, Lee would profess surprise in 2008 when Defonseca confessed that she was not Jewish and the childhood she described in Misha was made up, saying that no research she did had led her to think the story was anything but true.[9]

As the publisher of the book, Daniel had made many public statements which addressed the issue of whether Defonseca's memoir was truthful. One of these public statements came in 1999, and was prompted by the public controversy that occurred when Binjamin Wilkomirski's alleged Holocaust memoir Fragments: Memories of a Wartime Childhood 1939-1948 was shown to be a fraud. Daniel wrote "Is Misha's story fact or invention? Without hard evidence one way or the other, questions will always remain... It is left to the reader to decide."[7] Later, after the first jury award, Daniel would say "I have no idea whether [Misha's story] is true or not. My experience is that all Holocaust stories are far-fetched. All survivor stories are miracles."[5] By 2007, however, Daniel was trying to actively debunk the story of Misha in hopes that it would provide a way to challenge the judgement against her.[6] In August 2007, Daniel began a blog titled "Best-Seller", telling the story of how the book came to be published, and attracted attention from Sharon Sergeant, a genealogist. Using clues from the various versions of the manuscript, including the "pseudonym" of Monique de Wael, Sergeant turned up documents from the life of Monique de Wael, such as a baptismal record and a school register showing de Wael enrolled in elementary school in 1943 when "Misha" was supposed to be wandering through Europe. After Daniel published these documents on the blog in late February 2008, the Belgian newspaper Le Soir took up the controversy, unearthing and publishing more detail on de Wael's parents.[10] Within a week, Defonseca had acknowledged that Monique de Wael was her real name and that the life of "Misha" was a fantasy.[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Defonseca's statement to Le Soir.
  2. ^ a b c d Eskin, Blake. "Crying Wolf: Why did it take so long for a far-fetched Holocaust memoir to be debunked?", Slate.com, February 29, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c "Le vrai dossier de 'Misha'" (French)
  4. ^ "Holocaust: A children's version". Haaretz, 2008-01-23.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Incredible Journey". Boston Globe, 2001-10-31.
  6. ^ a b c "Den of lies". Boston Globe, 2008-03-01.
  7. ^ a b Eskin, Blake. A Life in Pieces: The Making and Unmaking of Binjamin Wilkomirski, New York and London: Norton, 2002, ISBN 0-393-04871-3. pp. 197-8
  8. ^ wissen.spiegel.de/wissen/dokument-druck.html?id=9133130&top=SPIEGEL.
  9. ^ "Writer admits Holocaust book is not true", Boston Globe, February 29, 2008.
  10. ^ Metdepenningen, Marc. "Le vrai dossier de « Misha »", Le Soir, 2008-02-23. Retrieved on 2008-03-01. (French) 

[edit] External links