Dear List members -
It was great to have Edgar at our premiere to a full house (the large
auditorium of the super modern Filmmuseum seats abut 315).
Thank you for coming and sharing your impressions with the list.
Irene- Director Sherman de Jesus informs me that he will try to enter
Shtetl in the Haifa Festival.
I will keep the list informed of other venues which may be more
accessible. The film will be screened again in Amsterdam and Utrecht, and
starting this Sunday in two parts on Dutch TV by Jewish Broadcasting. The
film's producer is trying for a US Premiere at Tribeca, but over time I
expect that many US Jewish Film Festivals will include the movie. And this
is the kind of movie that will eventually make it to Jewish Community
Centers, even if commercial distribution to theaters is limited.
As for skeptical Hardy, there were many families in Curacao that came from
Czernowitz. Among these were Willu and Cilli Weisinger, whose wedding
photo can be found on Ehpes. They owned a jewelry store on Madurostraat.
And many members of the extensive Faerman family came from Czernowitz,
including the Fruchters and Katzes, some of whome made it to Curacao via
Transnistria. Some refugees moved on, like Lucca Ginsburg. But a majority
of our community that settled there came from Bukovina or Galicia. Among
these were the Seibalds, the first settlers from Eastern Europe to land on
the island, who came from Snyatin, which is the nearest town to
Vaskiivtsi, across the Cheremosz.
In addition to some current views and archival material showing the
grandeur of Czernowitz made it into the movie, one of the most important
scenes is at the train station. I explained that this was likely the first
monumental building that my father saw when as a little boy he escaped the
approaching Russian army on the Cheremosz in WWI with his father and
brothers. It is also likely the last place the Wiznitzer brothers set foot
on Bukovina soil before leaving for the Americas in the late 20s. Although
it is not identified, there is also a scene in the Czernowitz cemetery at
the grave of my grandfather Leib Wiznitzer, who died about 2 years later.
I don't know if Hardy will ever consider these to constitute a sufficient
"Czernowitz connection". But I hope you will judge for yourselves.
Mark
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Received on 2014-10-29 08:46:45
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