000 02060nam a22002057a 4500
005 20250317204321.0
008 250317b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9789694026558
082 _a289.9 KAH
100 _aKahan, Hazel
245 _aA house in Lahore :
_bgrowing up Jewish in Pakistan : a memoir/
_cgrowing up Jewish in Pakistan : a memoir.
260 _aUnited States:
_bHazel Selzer Kahan,
_c2022.
300 _a244 Pages.
520 _aFleeing Germany in 1933 and then Italy in1937 after Mussolini joined the Berlin-Rome Axis, two 27-year-old Jewish physicians follow the advice of a Vatican monsignor to seek a new future in British India. They settle in Lahore, becoming parents of first a daughter and then her brother, three months old in1940 when the family is arrested by the British as "enemy aliens" and interned for almost six years in British internment camps near Bombay. Following the family's release to Lahore in 1946, the children are educated in Lahore's convents and then boarding schools in Kashmir, India and England. After Partition in 1947, Lahore becomes part of Pakistan. In 1971, a new political regime declares Jews are no longer welcome and the family leaves Lahore forever. This memoir describes the contradictions and dilemmas of growing up Jewish in internment and post-British Raj Muslim Pakistan, shuffling identities while learning the futility of belonging and the negotiable meaning of home. Drawing on extensive boarding school correspondence, the book unflinchingly examines the power of letter writing to bind a scattered family yet its inability to prevent schisms. Her father's death releases in the author a compulsion to discover whether her beloved childhood house still stands. Forty years after leaving "forever", she returns to the town of her birth, unsure whether welcome or rejection await but unprepared for what she finds!
546 _aIn English.
563 _aH.B
650 _aJewish families Pakistan Biography
650 _aPhysicians Pakistan Biography
942 _2ddc
_cBook
999 _c2189901
_d2189877