Paula Biren

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/instantiations/us-005578-irn1003910-eng-irn1003910_eng an entity of type: Instantiation

Paula Biren 
Claude Lanzmann was born in Paris to a Jewish family that immigrated to France from Eastern Europe. He attended the Lycée Blaise-Pascal in Clermont-Ferrand. His family went into hiding during World War II. He joined the French resistance at the age of 18 and fought in the Auvergne. Lanzmann opposed the French war in Algeria and signed a 1960 antiwar petition. From 1952 to 1959 he lived with Simone de Beauvoir. In 1963 he married French actress Judith Magre. Later, he married Angelika Schrobsdorff, a German-Jewish writer, and then Dominique Petithory in 1995. He is the father of Angélique Lanzmann, born in 1950, and Félix Lanzmann (1993-2017). Lanzmann's most renowned work, Shoah, is widely regarded as the seminal film on the subject of the Holocaust. He began interviewing survivors, historians, witnesses, and perpetrators in 1973 and finished editing the film in 1985. In 2009, Lanzmann published his memoirs under the title"Le lièvre de Patagoni" (The Patagonian Hare). He was chief editor of the journal"Les Temps Modernes" which was founded by Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, until his death on July 5, 2018. https://www.newyorker.com/culture/postscript/claude-lanzmann-changed-the-history-of-filmmaking-with-shoah Some women central to the production of"Shoa" (1985) include Hebrew interpreter, Francine Kaufmann; Polish interpreter, Barbra Janicka; Yiddish interpreter, Mrs. Apflebaum; assistant directors, Corinna Coulmas and Irena Steinfeldt; editors, Ziva Postec and Anna Ruiz; and assistant editor, Yael Perlov. Paula Biren was born Pawa Sara Szmajer on Apr. 7, 1922, in Łódź, Poland. She moved into the Łódź ghetto in 1940 and lived there until her deportation to Auschwitz concentration camp in Aug. 1944. In Oct. 1944, she was transferred to a subcamp of Auschwitz where she was imprisoned until Dec. 1944. After World War II, Paula spent two months in the spring of 1946 in a displaced persons camp in Berlin, Germany, and then moved to the Zeilsheim DP camp in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, in the summer of 1946. She attended medical school in Germany from 1946 to 1951, when she immigrated to the United States, settling in Cincinnati, Ohio 
Paula Biren 

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