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Efratia Gitai : correspondence 1929-1994

2019 - CPL - Centro Primo Levi

408 p. : ill.

  • Born in 1909 in Haifa to Russian Zionist parents, Efratia Gitai was the eldest daughter of the Second Aliyah, the second wave of Jewish immigrants to Ottoman Palestine. Her family's migration and her own critical eye made her a keen observer of watershed moments: the Bolshevik Revolution; the cosmopolitan culture of Vienna, where she studied psychology with Anna Freud; Hitler's 1932 speech at Alexanderplatz; Churchill's declaration of war heard as she fled by boat from Poland to Haifa; early experiments in kibbutz living; and the Six Day War. In Haifa, she married Bauhaus architect Munio Weinraub Gitai, who was poised to shape modern Tel Aviv and who, Efratia notes, had met the greats, such as Kandinsky, Paul Klee, and Mohology-Nagy, and the director Mies van der Rohe, with whom he worked on the last project in Berlin before Hitler came to power. [Publisher's text]