Ilse Losa Explained

Ilse Losa
Birth Name:Ilse Lieblich
Birth Date:20 March 1913
Birth Place:Melle, Germany
Death Place:Porto
Nationality:Portuguese
Occupation:Artist
Known For:Novelist, children's book writer and translator
Notable Works:O Mundo em que vivi

Ilse Losa (1913—2006) was a Portuguese writer and translator, of German-Jewish origin.

Early life

Ilse Lieblich Losa was born on 20 March 1913 in the village of Buer, in Melle, in the district of Osnabrück in Germany. She was the daughter of Artur Lieblich and Hedwig Hirsch Lieblich, both German Jews. She was initially raised and educated by her paternal grandparents. After rejoining her parents and her two younger brothers, Ernest and Fritz, she attended the Osnabrück and Hildesheim high schools and, later, the Hanover Business Institute. After the premature death of her father, victim of cancer, in the late 1920s, the family began to suffer severe financial difficulties. To help out, she went to England in 1930 for a year, where she worked as an au pair. There, she had her first contacts with children's schools and children's problems, which would influence her later writing career.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Departure from Germany

On her return to Germany, she found her family to be increasingly the target of anti-Semitic attacks. Threatened by the Gestapo with being sent to a concentration camp, following hours of interrogation, she made the decision with her mother to leave Germany, arriving by boat in Portugal in 1934, and settling in the city of Porto, where her brother Fritz was already living. In 1935, having acquired Portuguese nationality, she married the architect Arménio Taveira Losa. That same year, she became a member of the Associação Feminina Portuguesa para a Paz, (Portuguese Women's Peace Association - AFPP), an apolitical and non-religious association of anti-fascist and anti-war women. Her mother died in 1936.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Writing career

Losa's first daughter, Alexandra, was born in 1938, and the second, Margarida, in 1943. In 1949, she published her first book, O Mundo em que vivi (The world I lived in), which told of her childhood, adolescence and youth, until the time she left Germany. The Holocaust features strongly in this work, as it does in several of her novels. She was the only writer in Portugal to really address the Holocaust. Cavaco argues that the author's works on this subject can be read as a trilogy, in which this historical event is represented. In this sense, Losa's novels explore before, during and after the Holocaust, examining different actors who were involved in the event, such as the victims, the perpetrators, the bystanders and the resisters.[2] [3] [4] [5]

Although Losa mainly worked on children's literature, she also published in several German and Portuguese newspapers and magazines, such as Jornal de Notícias, Comércio do Porto, Diário de Notícias, Público and Neue Deutsche Literatur. She also collaborated in the translation of Portuguese works published in Germany and translated from German to Portuguese authors such as Bertolt Brecht, Erich Kästner, Max Frisch and Anna Seghers, as well as The Diary of Anne Frank.[1] [2] [4] [3]

Ilse Losa died on 6 January 2006, in Porto.

Awards and honours

Publications

Ilse Losa's main publications are as follows:[3] [7]

Novels

Children’s literature

Collections of articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ILSE LOSA centenário do nascimento . Póvoa de Varzim . 9 November 2020.
  2. Web site: Ilse Losa . Portal da Literatura . 9 November 2020.
  3. Web site: Ilse Lieblich Losa, 1913-2016 . Dicionário Cronológico de Autores Portugueses . 9 November 2020.
  4. Web site: Ilse Losa . e-cultura . 9 November 2020.
  5. Web site: Cavaco . Paulo Jorge Teixeira . A representação do holocausto em Ilse Losa . Universidade Aberta . 9 November 2020.
  6. Web site: João Villaret e Ilse Losa em selos dos Correios de Portugal . Correio da Manhã . 9 November 2020.
  7. Web site: Ilse Losa. (re)descobrindo os seus livros – homenagem no ano do centenário do seu nascimento . Wordpress . 9 November 2020.