Arrêté (2), 2016
ARTIST | Eleanor Winters
SIZE | 23 x 30.5 cm, 9” x 12”
MEDIUM | Ink, oil pastels
Arrêté par la police du gouvernement de Vichy, complice de l'occupant nazi, plus de 11,000 enfants furent déportés de France de 1942 à 1944 parce qu'ils étaient nés Juifs. Plus de 1200 de ces enfants vivaient dans le 11ème arrondissement, parmi eux 199 Tout-Petits n'ont-pas eu le temps de fréquenter l'école.
(English Translation)
Arrested by the police of the Vichy government, in complicity with the Nazi occupation, more than 11,000 children were deported from France between 1942 and 1944 because they were born Jews. More than 1200 of these children lived in the 11th district, among whom 199 very small children never had the chance to attend school.
ARTIST | Eleanor Winters
SIZE | 23 x 30.5 cm, 9” x 12”
MEDIUM | Ink, oil pastels
Arrêté par la police du gouvernement de Vichy, complice de l'occupant nazi, plus de 11,000 enfants furent déportés de France de 1942 à 1944 parce qu'ils étaient nés Juifs. Plus de 1200 de ces enfants vivaient dans le 11ème arrondissement, parmi eux 199 Tout-Petits n'ont-pas eu le temps de fréquenter l'école.
(English Translation)
Arrested by the police of the Vichy government, in complicity with the Nazi occupation, more than 11,000 children were deported from France between 1942 and 1944 because they were born Jews. More than 1200 of these children lived in the 11th district, among whom 199 very small children never had the chance to attend school.
ARTIST | Eleanor Winters
SIZE | 23 x 30.5 cm, 9” x 12”
MEDIUM | Ink, oil pastels
Arrêté par la police du gouvernement de Vichy, complice de l'occupant nazi, plus de 11,000 enfants furent déportés de France de 1942 à 1944 parce qu'ils étaient nés Juifs. Plus de 1200 de ces enfants vivaient dans le 11ème arrondissement, parmi eux 199 Tout-Petits n'ont-pas eu le temps de fréquenter l'école.
(English Translation)
Arrested by the police of the Vichy government, in complicity with the Nazi occupation, more than 11,000 children were deported from France between 1942 and 1944 because they were born Jews. More than 1200 of these children lived in the 11th district, among whom 199 very small children never had the chance to attend school.