Judith Magyar Isaacson

Judith Magyar Isaacson (July 3, 1925 – November 10, 2015)[1] was a Hungarian-American educator, university administrator, speaker, and author.

Judith Magyar Isaacson
2006 book signing
Born
Judit Magyar

July 3, 1925
Kaposvár, Hungary
DiedNovember 10, 2015(2015-11-10) (aged 90)
EducationB.A. mathematics, Bates College (1965)
M.A mathematics, Bowdoin College (1967)
OccupationDean of Women and Dean of Students
Years active1969–1978
EmployerBates College
Known forSurvivor of Auschwitz concentration camp
Notable work
Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor (1990)
Spouse(s)Irving Isaacson
Children3
Parent(s)Jeno and Rózsi (Rose) Magyar
AwardsMaine Women's Hall of Fame (2004)

Born in Hungary into a Jewish family, Isaacson was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp with her mother and aunt in July 1944, where she spent eight months in forced labor in an underground munitions plant in Hessisch Lichtenau. After liberation, she married a United States intelligence officer and moved to his hometown of Lewiston, Maine. She earned bachelor's and master's degrees in mathematics in Maine colleges in the mid-1960s and taught at Lewiston High School and Bates College, serving as dean of women and dean of students at the latter institution. Her 1990 memoir, Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor, inspired a 1995 electronic chamber opera and a 1998 experimental film.

The recipient of numerous awards and three honorary degrees, Isaacson was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame in 2004.

Early life and deportation to Auschwitz

Born Judit Magyar[2][3] in Kaposvár, Hungary, she was the daughter of Jeno and Rózsi (Rose) Magyar.[1] She attended the gimnazium (high school) in that city and was valedictorian of her graduating class.[4] Her plans to study literature at the Sorbonne[5] were halted by the Nazi occupation of Hungary in March 1944. In May she and her family were incarcerated in a ghetto, from which her father and uncles were taken for forced labor.[1] On July 2, 1944, one day before her nineteenth birthday, she was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp with her mother, grandmothers, and aunts.[1][6] While her grandmothers and one aunt were immediately sent to the gas chamber,[1][6] she managed to stay together with her mother and another aunt, Magda Rosenberger.[7] Her father was transported to a Hungarian labor camp and from there to the Buchenwald concentration camp; at the end of the war, he died of starvation at the Mühldorf subcamp.[5][6][7]

The three women remained at Auschwitz until late August 1944,[6] when they were transported to Hessisch Lichtenau for forced labor in an underground munitions plant.[4][1] In April 1945 they were transferred to the Tekla camp near Leipzig,[6] where they were liberated by U.S. troops the same month.[7] During their wait for a transport back to Hungary, in May 1945, Judith met Irving Isaacson, an intelligence officer for the U.S. Army Office of Strategic Services, who reportedly "fell in love with her on the spot".[4][7] The couple married at the Nuremberg City Hall in December 1945, and Isaacson, a lawyer in private life,[1] arranged for her, her mother and aunt to immigrate to his hometown of Lewiston, Maine the next year.[4][7]

Teaching career

Following the birth of her third child in 1960, Isaacson became interested in studying mathematics through a program on public television.[4] She went on to attain a bachelor's degree in mathematics at Bates College in 1965, and a master's degree in mathematics at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, in 1967.[2]

After earning her bachelor's degree, she began teaching math at Lewiston High School and chaired that school's department of mathematics.[1] In 1968 she joined Bates College as lecturer in mathematics and computer science,[1] becoming Bates' first computer science teacher.[4] In 1969 she was appointed dean of women at Bates. During her interview, a member of the selection committee asked if she had ever resided in a dormitory, and she replied, "Yes, at Auschwitz".[4] In 1975 she became the first dean of students at Bates.[4] In the latter position, she successfully ended the "unequal and antiquated codes of social conduct for men and women", including a prohibition against students visiting the dorm rooms of students of the opposite sex, and improved the athletic opportunities for women students.[2] She retired in August 1978.[2]

Speaker and author

Isaacson willingly shared her wartime experiences with students and friends.[4] In 1976, while speaking to a group of students after the showing of a Holocaust film on campus, a student asked her "how she could smile after everything she had been through", and she did not have a satisfactory answer. That night, she dreamed of her Holocaust experiences, and began writing her memoirs the next morning.[1][5] She revisited her Hungarian hometown to conduct research for the book, which was published in 1990 as Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor.[2] The epigram of the book contains a verse from Hungarian poet Endre Ady: All who live, rejoice, rejoice.[8]

The book was later translated into German as Freut Euch Ihr Lebenden, Freut Euch (Rejoice, You Who Live, Rejoice) and into Hungarian as Koszonet Az Eletert (Thank You for Life).[3] In 1991, Seed of Sarah was included on the New York Public Library list of "Books for the Teen Age".[1] The book made Isaacson a popular speaker for schools, youth groups, and community groups throughout Maine.[4] Although she planned to write a sequel, she did not find the time due to her speaking schedule.[9]

In 1995 Mark Polishook composed an electronic chamber opera for one voice called Seed of Sarah, which was made into a 28-minute experimental film by director Andrea Weiss in 1998.[1][10] Isaacson read portions of her book on the film soundtrack.[1]

Isaacson recorded an oral history interview with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1993,[11] and contributed a chapter on her life experiences to the 1999 book A Heart of Wisdom: Making the Jewish journey from midlife through the elder years (Jewish Lights Publishing).[9]

Memberships

She was a member of the Bowdoin College Board of Overseers from 1984 to 1996. She was also a board member of the Auburn Public Library, Central Maine Medical Center (CMMC), and the CMMC School of Nursing and Health Professions.[4] She was a director of the Holocaust and Human Rights Center of Maine in the late 1980s.[12]

Honors and awards

Isaacson received honorary degrees from Bates College (Doctor of Laws, 1994),[2] Colby College, and the University of New England.[4]

She was a recipient of the Deborah Morton Award for outstanding women from Westbrook College in 1993, the Gordon S. Hargraves Preservation of Freedom Prize from Bowdoin College in 1996, the Maryann Hartman Award for distinguished Maine women from the University of Southern Maine, and the Remember Me Award from the Maine Healthcare Association.[4][1] In 2003 she was honored as one of the Women of Distinction by the Kennebec Council of the Girl Scouts.[1] In 2004 she was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame.[4]

In 1987 she was a guest of the city of Hessisch Lichtenau, where she had been a forced laborer in a munitions plant during the war, on the occasion of their dedication of a monument to victims of the Holocaust.[4]

Personal

Despite her wartime experience, Isaacson was "a warm and humorous optimist".[2] Bates Holocaust professor Steve Hochstadt described her as "an extraordinarily joyous person who could tell you about very sad things that happened to her, her relatives and her friends, but who was able to retain joy in life".[2] She was fluent in five languages: Hungarian, German, French, Latin, and English.[5]

She and her husband Irving Isaacson, who survived her, had two sons and a daughter.[4][5] She died on November 10, 2015, at the age of 90 at her home in Auburn, Maine.[5]

Bibliography

  • Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor. University of Illinois Press. 1990. ISBN 0252016513.
gollark: Has anyone *read* the Opus OS code?
gollark: This is obviously how Milo Remote works.
gollark: Idea: grilled cheese storage through enslaved players' inventories.
gollark: That seems excessive.
gollark: I don't use imperial units.

References

  1. Rose, Clayton (13 November 2015). "Remembering Maine Educator and Overseer Emerita Judith Magyar Isaacson G'67". Bowdoin Sun. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  2. Burns, Jay (12 November 2015). "Judith Magyar Isaacson '65, LL.D. '94, dies at age 90". Bates College. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  3. "Judith Magyar Isaacson". My Jewish Legacy. 17 August 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  4. "Judith Magyar Isaacson, 1925–2015". Portland Press Herald. 11 November 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  5. Marquard, Bryan (19 November 2015). "Judith Magyar Isaacson, at 90; former Bates College dean wrote Holocaust memoir". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  6. "Guide to the Judith Isaacson papers, 1912–1996". Edmund S. Muskie Archives and Special Collections Library. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  7. Edmondson, Amanda (2008). "Isaacson, Judith". Maine: An Encyclopedia. Publius Research. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  8. Seed of Sarah: Memoirs of a Survivor. University of Illinois Press. 1990. p. vi. ISBN 0252016513.
  9. Berrin, Susan, ed. (1999). "Still Surviving". A Heart of Wisdom: Making the Jewish journey from midlife through the elder years (Revised ed.). Jewish Lights Publishing. pp. 231–233. ISBN 1580230512.
  10. "Seed of Sarah (1998)". Internet Movie Database. 2016. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  11. "Oral history interview with Judith Magyar Isaacson". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 26 August 1993. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  12. Mitchell, Jennifer (12 November 2015). "Judith Magyar Isaacson, Holocaust Survivor and Best-Selling Author, Dies at 90". Maine Public Broadcasting Network. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
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