Avec la photographie qui donne des instantanées de vies dans ces lieux de survie détestables, on comprend que l'art quand il est engagé est un instrument de connaissance qui donne à voir et à méditer.
MARY ELMES - Born: May 5, 1908, Cork, Ireland. Died: March 9, 2002, Perpignan, France. Righteous Among Nations: June 27, 2014, Canet-en-Rousillion, France. Marie Elisabeth Jean ELMES was an Irish aid worker credited with saving the lives of at least 200 Jewish children from Rivesaltes camp during the Holocaust, by hiding them in the boot of her car. Before that she had worked in a hospital in Almeria, treating sick children during the Spanish Civil War. Close to the beach at Argèles-sur-Mer, where more than 100,000 refugees were penned in between the ocean and the barbed wire, stands the historic castle of Valmy. 3 September 1939, a community of 12 refugee artists put on an exhibition of their paintings, drawings and sculpture in the castle grounds. Dorothy A.Morris and Mary Elmes, Quakers, visited the Mas de l'Abat and wrote the following sentence in the "livre d'or" where visitors to the mas used to write compliments for these exiled artists “Spirit and enthusiasm are the most important things in life, and these the Spaniards will have for ever.” It’s signed, “Dorothy A Morris & Mary Elmes, Los Amigos Quakeros (the Quaker Friends)”. Mary Elmes was member of the Quaker organisation that helped Spanish Republicans refugees in French concentration camp at Argelès in 1939, after the Spanish Civil War.
Avec la photographie qui donne des instantanées de vies dans ces lieux de survie détestables, on comprend que l'art quand il est engagé est un instrument de connaissance qui donne à voir et à méditer.
trop bien ;);););););) cœur mon poteau
MARY ELMES -
Born: May 5, 1908, Cork, Ireland. Died: March 9, 2002, Perpignan, France.
Righteous Among Nations: June 27, 2014, Canet-en-Rousillion, France.
Marie Elisabeth Jean ELMES was an Irish aid worker credited with saving the lives of at least 200 Jewish children from Rivesaltes camp during the Holocaust, by hiding them in the boot of her car. Before that she had worked in a hospital in Almeria, treating sick children during the Spanish Civil War.
Close to the beach at Argèles-sur-Mer, where more than 100,000 refugees were penned in between the ocean and the barbed wire, stands the historic castle of Valmy.
3 September 1939, a community of 12 refugee artists put on an exhibition of their paintings, drawings and sculpture in the castle grounds.
Dorothy A.Morris and Mary Elmes, Quakers, visited the Mas de l'Abat and wrote the following sentence in the "livre d'or" where visitors to the mas used to write compliments for these exiled artists “Spirit and enthusiasm are the most important things in life, and these the Spaniards will have for ever.” It’s signed, “Dorothy A Morris & Mary Elmes, Los Amigos Quakeros (the Quaker Friends)”.
Mary Elmes was member of the Quaker organisation that helped Spanish Republicans refugees in French concentration camp at Argelès in 1939, after the Spanish Civil War.
oui pour les parquer comme des Animaux;
qui regarde sa en cours despagnol?
alllerrrrr lequipeeeeee
wesh bro la fima