Sir Victor Sassoon, Who Is Presently on a Visit to Brazil, Is a Member of an Old Aristocratic English Family and One of the Most Famous Men of the World

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Sir Victor Sassoon, Who Is Presently on a Visit to Brazil, Is a Member of an Old Aristocratic English Family and One of the Most Famous Men of the World --,.\ OF THE MOST FAMOUS THROUGHBREDSOF THE CENrURY AMONGUS: Sir Victor Sassoon, who is presently on a visit to Brazil, is a member of an old aristocratic English family and one of the most famous men of the world. He has acquired this fame through the spectacular victories obtained by his horses in the European racing courses. He, himself, has told the reporter: - "? either business affairs, nor polities no1· an aristocratic descent (Sir Victor is a "Baronet" and a "G.B.E.".) would have made me f mous. My fame is due to the fact that I own the best English racing horses of the century. And among these, I want to mention the name of my favourite, the champion nPinza" who this year won the .,wo most sensational races of Englandi the Derby at Epsom and the 11King George and Queen Elizabeth Plate". ORIGIN OF A NAME: Sir Victor ·oecomes very enthusiastic when talldng about his <!hampions and anticipating our question he tolls us why he gave the name of Pinza to his famous horse: - "I called him Pinza because he was sired by a French horse whose name meant singer. Well, he is a big horse and his size and movements reminded me of Ei ~io Pinzn, the Italian singer that I o much admire, sot <lid not hesitate and gavP. him the same name". Sir Victor added that Pinza, win."ling the Derby, has l,rought him approximately 4.500.000,00 in Brazilian currency. FA 1ILY OF POErS 2 S1ATEs1.r.EHTAr D INDUSTRI ~LS: Sir Victor told us that among the m""mbers of his family he is one or the least important. - "Others are more famous than I. I have two cousins that have honoured the name of our family. One ts still alive: he is the poet and writer Siegfried s ssoon. The ot~eris Phillip Sassoon, who died during the war and had great politic 1 influence in Great Britain, where he occupied a Cabinet post as sub-secretary for the Ministry of L2.bour. DEPUTY JN INDIA: Sir Victor informed us that England ha.s gr~at interests in the East, specially in China and India. As a banker, Sir Victor is always in the look-out for oppor-tunities for making money. We asked him if he had never been tempted to tal-te up politics. He answered: - 2 - - 1110, politics have never had the slightest interest to me. is It true that 30 years ago, while in India, I was what you call here a deputy. I didn't, however, finish my term of office, first due to lack of time and ~condly, because those activities did not hold any particular attraction . for me. · Sir Victor Sassoon is one of the richest men in Engla.~d. His financlal activities are spread all over the world. As a banker! h!=lis ready to finance any new deal that will stimulate the deve op­ m.ent of airiy country friendly towards Great Britain. By so doing, / he ha~ made fabulous fortunes, which, many times, he gives back to the country where he operates, by way of donations to institutions of social welfare. Sir Vietor inforn:..~d us also that no horse of his property has ever raced in Brazil. He finished by saying that he came to Rio, as he doe.s every :vear , to keep up to date with his business here. (0 GLOBO- November 5th 1953). .
Recommended publications
  • The Chinese Opium Wars and British-Jews
    IV. THE CHINESE OPIUM WARS AND BRITISH-JEWS "A hell-hound that doth hunt us all to death: That dog, that had his teeth before his eyes, To worry lambs and lap their gentle blood, That foul defacer of God's handiwork, That excellent grand tyrant of the earth, That reigns in galled eyes of weeping souls, Thy womb let loose, to chase us to our graves." Richard III, Act IV, Scene IV. In Shanghai: City for Sale, ps. 6-7, published in 1940 by Har­ court-Brace f1 Co" New York, we read: "This British desire for a wider sphere of operations precipitated Britain's first war with China" (in 1842). "It was called the 'Opium War' because the British urge to swamp China with India-grown opium and Chinese refusal to take it were its tangible cause. "There is no doubt about the wanton aggression that marked the beginning of this undeclared war, nor about the singular brutality with which the British soldiers sacked peaceful cities, burned public buildings, looted, plundered and murdered ... There was much ruthless bayoneting. Sacred temple quarters were soiled, exquisite wood carvings were used for camp fires, And British soldiers watched old men, women and even children cutting each other's throats in utter despair, or drowning themselves. 'The lament of the father­ less, the anarchy, the starvation, and the misery of the home­ less wanderers', says the East India Committee of the Co­ lonial Society in London in 1843, 'are the theme of a fright­ ful triumph.' " The famous Sassoon family, probably the most influential Jewish family in England today and one of the few intimate with the last three generations of the Royal Family, established their wealth and power in the Opium Wars.
    [Show full text]
  • Community in Exile: German Jewish Identity Development in Wartime Shanghai, 1938-1945 Alice I
    Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont CMC Senior Theses CMC Student Scholarship 2011 Community in Exile: German Jewish Identity Development in Wartime Shanghai, 1938-1945 Alice I. Reichman Claremont McKenna College Recommended Citation Reichman, Alice I., "Community in Exile: German Jewish Identity Development in Wartime Shanghai, 1938-1945" (2011). CMC Senior Theses. Paper 96. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/96 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you by Scholarship@Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in this collection by an authorized administrator. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CLAREMONT McKENNA COLLEGE COMMUNITY IN EXILE: GERMAN JEWISH IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT IN WARTIME SHANGHAI, 1938-1945 SUBMITTED TO PROFESSOR ARTHUR ROSENBAUM AND DEAN GREGORY HESS BY ALICE REICHMAN FOR SENIOR THESIS ACADEMIC YEAR 2010-2011 APRIL 25, 2011 TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ……………………………………………………………………... iii INTRODUCTION …………………………………………………………………………....1 CHAPTER ONE FLIGHT FROM THE NAZIS AND ARRIVAL IN A FOREIGN LAND ……………………………....7 CHAPTER TWO LIFE AND CONDITIONS IN SHANGHAI ………………………………………………….......22 CHAPTER THREE RESPONDING TO LIFE IN SHANGHAI ……………………………………………………….38 CHAPTER FOUR A HETEROGENEOUS COMMUNITY : DIFFERENCES AMONG JEWISH REFUGEES ……………. 49 CHAPTER FIVE MAINTAINING A CENTRAL EUROPEAN IDENTITY : GERMANIC CULTURE COMES TO SHANGHAI ………………………………………………………………………………... 64 CHAPTER SIX YOUTH EXPERIENCE …………………………………………………………………….... 80 CHAPTER SEVEN A COSMOPOLITAN CITY : ENCOUNTERS AND EXCHANGES WITH OTHER CULTURES ……....98 CONCLUSION ………………………………………………………………………….... 108 DIRECTORY OF REFERENCED SURVIVORS ………………………………………………. 112 BIBLIOGRAPHY ………………………………………………………………………….. 117 ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would first like to thank my reader, Professor Arthur Rosenbaum, for all the help that he has given me throughout this process. Without his guidance this thesis would not have been possible. I am grateful for how understanding and supportive he was throughout this stressful year.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel Ordered to Recognize Non-Orthodox Conversions We're
    Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Norwich, CT 06360 Permit #329 Serving The Jewish Communities of Eastern Connecticut & Western R.I. CHANGE SERVICE RETURN TO: 28 Channing St., New London, CT 06320 REQUESTED VOL. XLVII NO.5 PUBLISHED BI-WEEKLY MARCH 5, 2021/21 ADAR 5781 NEXT DEADLINE MAR. 12, 2021 16 PAGES HOW TO REACH US - PHONE 860-442-8062 • FAX 860-540-1475 • EMAIL [email protected] • BY MAIL: 28 CHANNING STREET, NEW LONDON, CT 06320 We’re gonna make this place our home Israel ordered to recognize three back and forths before I un- derstood that he was telling me non-Orthodox conversions about a new app. New for me. Not for him. By the time 2013-14 rolled and I loved it! I’ll never forget thearound, moment I was in a proearly on April WhatsApp when - sApp from May Abudraham with soI received much excitement,a phone call practically on What screaming in my ear, “I’m com- ing to New London!” she shouted. “I’m coming to New London!” It took me a second or two till I realized she was telling me she Welcoming our 2013-14 Young Emissaries to orientation at Camp would be our new Young Emis- Israeli High Court President Esther HayutCredit: Emil Salman Laurelwood on August 27. l-r: JFEC Ass’t Director Marcia Reinhard, sary in the coming year. Then she Emissary May Abudraham, JFEC Executive Director Jerry Fischer, continued, “But I’m not supposed By Josh Breiner, Judy Maltz, and Emissary Bar Halgoa. to tell you yet so don’t say any- Aaron Rabinowitz, Jonathan Lis, Haaretz By Marcia Reinhard, thing.
    [Show full text]
  • The Last Kings of Shanghai by Jonathan Kaufman Tells the Multi
    The Last Kings of Shanghai by Jonathan Kaufman tells the multi-generational story of two rival Jewish dynasties who thrived in twentieth century Shanghai and Hong Kong. This non-fiction chronicle of the Sassoon and Kadoorie families reads like a novel. Remarkably both clans were displaced Baghdadi Jews who eventually settled in Shanghai and by the 1930s each had achieved great wealth and influence there. The Sassoons were loyal English citizens and advisors to royalty. The foundation of their fortune came from working in the opium trade. Victor Sassoon was an astute businessman who became hugely successful in real estate. He was also known as a playboy that entertained lavishly. Brothers Lawrence and Horace Kadoorie were held to a tight rein by their father Elly, but this was not a hinderance. Lawrence and Horace worked together to maintain Elly’s standards and greatly increased their fortune. Today the Kadoorie family continues to control China Light and Power and the Peninsula hotel chain that they built. There are many fascinating facets to each family’s history, but most revealing is when they worked together to assist Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazis. More than 18,000 Jews from Austria and Germany escaped to Shanghai as no visa was needed to enter. Shanghai did not turn the Jews away. The Kadoorie and Sassoon families helped build schools for the refugees and provided personal and financial assistance. Kaufman gives his reader great insight into the choices these powerful families made and how their decisions shaped Shanghai and Hong Kong today. .
    [Show full text]
  • The Life of Central European Jewish Refugees In
    NUMBER 23 ReportNOVEMBER • 2001 CENTER for the PACIFIC RIM THE CENTER FOR THE “Home Afar”: The Life of Central European Jewish PACIFIC RIM PROMOTES understanding, communica- tion, and cooperation Refugees in Shanghai During World War II among the cultures and economies of the Pacific Rim and provides leader- ship in strengthening the position of the San Dr. Péter Vámos is a native of Introduction Francisco Bay Area as a Hungary. He received his Ph.D. Between 1938 and the outbreak of the War in the pre-eminent American gate- Pacific about 20,000 Jewish refugees escaped to the way to the Pacific. It fulfills from the Hungarian Academy of international city of Shanghai. In the past twenty its mission through inter- Sciences in 1997 in Chinese his- years, a number of books and articles have been pub- disciplinary academic pro- tory, and later taught classes in grams, research, print and lished about their story both in Western languages online publications, schol- Chinese language and history at and in Chinese. Some are memoirs by the refugees arly exchanges, confer- Karoli Gaspar University of Sciences. In the first half themselves, who were part of this unique community, ences, and other outreach of 2001, he served as Research Fellow at the Center that existed for about one decade. They are trying to activities. for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the US Holocaust preserve their memories for future generations. W. Michael Blumenthal, U. S. Secretary of the Treasury Memorial Museum in Washington, DC. During this under President Carter and former refugee in THE RICCI INSTITUTE IS time he was invited by the USF Center for the Pacific Shanghai, comments on the interest in this story for part of the Center for the Rim and its Ricci Institute to deliver a paper on the historians: "it is perhaps, above all, an interesting and Pacific Rim.
    [Show full text]
  • Sephardi Bulletin 2016
    SEPTEMBER 2016 VOL. 71 the bulletinTHE MAGAZINE OF THE S&P SEPHARDI COMMUNITY sephardi.org.uk The home of the Sephardi community since 1656 the bulletin MEMORIES The High Holy Days bring with them a sense of awe and reverence as we come together to connect both to G-d and our own identities; as well as thinking about our past and future. They bring a profound sense of community as we see our synagogues full and we sit with friends and family engaging in our prayers and traditions. Thankfully, the vibrancy of the community continues beyond Rosh HaShana and CONTENTS Yom Kippur and the year is filled with lovely opportunities for us to share, learn and grow together. It is on these days that we meditate on all aspects of our lives and The Sephardi Bulletin Message from Senior Rabbi Joseph Dweck 3 how we wish to live them. Integral to our lives are the relationships and communal 2 Ashworth Road Congregation News 4 London W9 1JY bonds that we have and that we wish to build. Our community synagogues and Message from the President of the Board of Deputies 9 T 020 7289 2573 events are at the heart of our unity and growth as a people. [email protected] Photo Pages Events 2015/16 11 www.sephardi.org.uk High Holy Days Information 20 As we stand before G-d we both dedicate ourselves to living our best lives and to engaging in a personal inventory of our choices and actions; we include in that our Editor Bevis Marks Synagogue 22 Alison Rosen Rabbi Morris — Debar Torah 26 involvement in our community.
    [Show full text]
  • Institutions and Interactions: Shanghai Jewish Refugees and American Jewish Communities, 1930S-1940S
    Georgia State University ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University History Theses Department of History 12-11-2017 Institutions and Interactions: Shanghai Jewish Refugees and American Jewish Communities, 1930s-1940s Anna Tucker Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/history_theses Recommended Citation Tucker, Anna, "Institutions and Interactions: Shanghai Jewish Refugees and American Jewish Communities, 1930s-1940s." Thesis, Georgia State University, 2017. https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/history_theses/117 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of History at ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INSTITUTIONS AND INTERACTIONS: SHANGHAI JEWISH REFUGEES AND AMERICAN JEWISH COMMUNITIES, 1930s-1940s by ANNA TUCKER Under the Direction of Marni Davis, Ph.D. ABSTRACT This study looks at the community of Shanghai Jews in its diversity, 1930s-1940s, then at its interactions in 1949 with the American Jewish communities of Atlanta and New York as Shanghai Jews were transported across the United States in sealed trains. This exploration supports the argument that Shanghai Jewish refugees and American Jewish communities existed in an interdependent relationship at the close of the 1940s. Through an exploration of individual and institutional interactions in Shanghai, Atlanta, and New York, with an emphasis on
    [Show full text]
  • What's New Podcast Transcript Season 4, Episode 3, the Last
    What’s New Podcast Transcript Season 4, Episode 3: The Last Kings of Shanghai October 27, 2020 Host: Dan Cohen, Dean of Libraries and Vice Provost for Information Collaboration at Northeastern University. Guest: Jonathan Kaufman, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and author, and Director of the Northeastern University School of Journalism. Host: Dan Cohen (00:08): We have long been told that this will be the Chinese century as the most populous nation in the world achieves economic dominance and as it extends its political influence across the globe. But that still emerging future will also be an extension of China's complex past when other nations arrived on its shores with colonialism, capitalism, and once distant cultures. Today on What's New, how the remarkable story of two Jewish families in Shanghai can tell us a lot about China past, present, and future. Host: Dan Cohen (00:42): Welcome back to What's New, I'm Dan Cohen. With me in the virtual studio is Jonathan Kaufman, the author of a fascinating new book, The Last Kings of Shanghai; The Rival Jewish Dynasties That Helped Create Modern China. Professor Kaufman is a Pulitzer prize, winning reporter and author, and director of the Northeastern University School of Journalism. He has reported on China for three decades for the Boston Globe and the Wall Street Journal. Thanks so much for joining me today, Jonathan, over Zoom in our virtual studio. Jonathan Kaufman (01:14): Thanks, Dan. It's great to be here. Host: Dan Cohen (01:15): Delighted to have you here.
    [Show full text]
  • The German-Jewish Refugees in Shanghai During the Second World War Leah Gottheiner (2005) “My Mother Did Not Want to Leave Breslau, Especially to Go to Shanghai
    You Don’t Have to Live Like a Refugee: The German-Jewish Refugees in Shanghai During the Second World War Leah Gottheiner (2005) “My mother did not want to leave Breslau, especially to go to Shanghai. If my older brother had not fled to Shanghai on his own in 1938 forcing my mother to give in to be near her first-born son, I’m sure that I would not be alive today. We were among the last to get out.”[1] In June of 1940, my grandfather Hans Gottheiner and his parents Jon and Frieda boarded a train in Breslau, Germany. This train was one of the very last available means of escape for a Jewish family from Nazi Germany. Young Hans, only ten years old, and his parents traveled through the Soviet Union, stopping in such places as Moscow and Siberia, until finally arriving six weeks later in Shanghai, China, the only haven open to them. Hans and his parents spent the next eight years living in Shanghai while hoping to someday move to a more desirable and permanent location. In the late 1930s and early 1940s thousands of Jews in Germany and Austria were fortunate to escape the persecution of the Nazis. Often these Jews fled Europe with little more than the clothes on their backs, but still maintained the hope that life in their new homes had to be better than the horrors they had experienced under the Nazis. Shanghai became an unexpected refuge for nearly twenty thousand Jews during the Holocaust, but the city posed obstacles of its own.
    [Show full text]
  • Discovering/ Rediscovering Shanghai-An
    Feature by Helen Lippman Discovering/ Rediscovering Jewish Shanghai An Insider’s Tour of Shanghai Today Ellis in Shanghai hortly after arriving in Shanghai recognized him from the picture on the the opportunity for commerce Shanghai for his high school reunion, back cover. offered after the British won the Opium my husband, Ellis Jacob— Wars and opened it to international trade. San Iraqi Jew and native The next morning—my first day in Shanghailander—was walking along the Shanghai—Ellis and I took Bar-Gal’s tour. With the still-bustling Huangpu River as Bund when a stranger grabbed his arm. In our group were an Australian couple a backdrop, evidence of the Baghdadi “Ellis, come talk to my people,” implored who’d arrived in the city ahead of their Jews—and the wealth they amassed— Dvir Bar-Gal, an Israeli photojournalist scheduled trip to be sure they didn’t miss is all around. The still stately, if slightly who conducts tours tracing the history it, several New Zealanders and Americans, shabby, Astor House Hotel, on a corner of Jews in Shanghai. His “people” were and a young Chinese woman whose where Suzhou Creek and the Huangpu the dozen or so men and women taking Jewish boyfriend had piqued her interest. River converge, was the headquarters his tour. for Ellis’s reunion. Owned by Kadoorie As we gathered around Bar-Gal to hear until the Communists took the city, The story Bar-Gal tells began with about Shanghai’s first Jewish settlers, I the hotel’s lobby is filled with pictures Baghdadi Jews like Ellis’s forebears, had a powerful sense of déjà vu.
    [Show full text]
  • Fjßk Market Tire Co
    THI EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1958 SPORTS A-13 6 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS OPEN DAILY 8 A. M.-9 P. M. 4 **¦:;' Jii. ¦v% J 4MHBB TIRE NAME or TIRE VALUE? AM^ LESTER PIGGOTT HOWARD GRANT German Horae His Hope Aboard Australian YOU GET BOTH at MARKET TIRE GRANT RIDES AUSTRALIAN * X ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ Practically all major manufacturers make several different ¦¦BBflMpPNjl Piggott Hopes Orsini AMD NEW grades of tires ... as many as 5 grades, each one varying in quality. So, be careful when you're tempted to buy a tire by Brings Better Luck n M YA|I the name of the manufacturer alone. You may be getting a low-grade tire, even it's a famous tire company. Lester Piggott will be seek- > best victories. He won the Ebor though made by ing a better reward than in his i with Gladness, John McShain’s am m wmm Best thing to do is come to one of our 6 convenient locations first venture for making the i fine mare who since has been immm MJM [ and check Market Tire's grade charts. Then see if name- journey from England to Laurel retired. ¦MH HI jjßyw tire I when he hops aboard Ger- When Sailor's Guide, the Aus- gUk for-name, grade-for-grade you don't get by far the best buy fl many’s Orsini in next Tues- tralian representative, goes wm day’s Washington, D. C., Inter- postward a week from today at Market Tire. No obligation. national. in the Washington, D. C. In- "W But whatever the conclusion ternational at Laurel, his Jockey it can’t be any worse than his i may be getting as much “play” first effort.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sassoon Dynasty
    THE SASSOON DYNASTY By CECIL ROTH LONDON ROBERT HALE LIMITED 102 GREAT RUSSELL STREET W.C.1 MCMXLI THE SASSOON DYNASTY By the same author THE LAST FLORENTINE REPUBLIC (London 1925: Italian trnnsbdon, Florence, 1929) THE CASALE PILGRIM (London, 1929) L 1APOTRE DES MARRANES (Paris, 1930) HISTORY OF THE JEWS IN VENICE (Philadelphia,_ 1930: Italictn translation, Rome, 1933) A JEWISH BOOK OF DAYS (!-,ondon, 1931) HISTORY OF THE MARRANOS (Philadelphia, 1932) LETTERE DI DONATO GIANNOTTI A FIERO VETTORI (In collaboration with R. Ridolfi: Florer ce, 1932) THE NEPHEW OF THE ALMIGHTY (London, 1933) A LIFE OF MENASSEH BEN ISRAEL (Philadelphia, 1934) A SHORT HISTORY OF THE JEWISH PEOPLE (London, 1936) THE SPANISH INQUISITION (London, 1937) THE JEWISH CONTRIBUTION TO CIVILISATION (London 1938: Jugoslav translation, Znghrcb, 1939) THE MAGNIFICENT ROTHSCHILDS (London, 1939) etc. SIR PHILlP SASSOON First Published April r94r Reprinted May r94r PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY WESTERN PRINTING SERVICES LTD., BRISTOL TO ADOLF HITLER FUEHRER OF THE GERMAN REICH FoR TWO reasons I desire to inscribe your name at the beginning of this book. The first is, that I consider its topic to be a useful object,lesson to the unfortunate people whom you have misled into thinking themselves a pure and superior "race" (whatever that may mean). The most rudi, mentary political commonsense should make it obvious that the absorption of gifted foreign families cannot be other than an advantage for a civilized state. England and English life have in particular been enriched for centuries past by receiving fresh elements from other sources, and there can surely be no reason to regret a liberality that has endowed her with soldiers, philanthro, pists and poets such as the Sassoon family and many like it have produced.
    [Show full text]