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The family secrets found in a shoebox

Hadley Freeman's stunning new book tells the story of European Jews in the twentieth century through the lens of her grandmother and great uncles' lives

February 27, 2020 10:43
Hadley Freeman

ByKeren David, Keren David interviews Hadley Freeman

6 min read

Delve into anyone’s family history and you’ll find stories. But there aren’t many families like Hadley Freeman’s where the narrative of her grandmother and her brothers feels as though it was carefully crafted to show the fate of Jews in the twentieth century. With high drama, heart-breaking tragedy, thwarted love and walk-on parts for Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall and Christian Dior, Freeman’s memoir House of Glass would feel too neat if it were a novel. It certainly reads like one, and if I were a film director I’d be snapping up the rights.

The book starts with Freeman’s discovery of a dusty shoebox in her late grandmother’s closet, hidden behind a pile of leather handbags. The contents included a sketch by Picasso, a metal plate with a prisoner’s name and number written on it, pages from a book entitled Dressmakers of France and a picture of her grandmother as a young woman, embracing a man. His face had been scratched off by someone’s fingernail — “presumably my grandmother’s,” writes Freeman.

The discovery actually came six years into Freeman’s quest to find out more about her father’s family history, and her research took another 12 years, and went far beyond just family. But the find convinced her to focus on the siblings, her grandmother Sala and great uncles Henri, Jacques and Alex. They started out with the surname Glahs, changed it to Glass in Paris and Alex adopted the name Maguy when he became a fashion designer. Each has a fascinating story to tell, pieced together from left behind artefacts, official records, and Alex’s case, a lively account of his life, including a leap from a train taking him to Auschwitz, doubly death-defying,

“I’m not saying my family is a microcosm of the Jewish experience,” says Freeman when we meet, “but it felt like it covered a lot of 20th century bases .”