Cuba's Forgotten Jewels: A Haven in Havana

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Cuba's Forgotten Jewels: A Haven in Havana


Part of our Culture Vulture series. For more screenings and information, visit: www.laemmle.com/culturevulture.
Cuba’s Forgotten Jewels explores the little-known story of the Jewish refugees who escaped Nazi-occupied Europe and found a safe haven on the Caribbean island of Cuba.

After a wave of Jewish refugees to Cuba in the 1920’s and 30’s, the island shut its doors to immigrants, most notably to the Jews aboard the ship the St. Louis in 1939. In 1940, Cuba changed course and took in 6,000 Jewish refugees, including hundreds of Jewish diamond cutters and their families who, for a few years, turned the small tropical island into one of the world’s major diamond-polishing centers. In the factories, women work beside men, Jews beside Cubans.

The film was born of the tales that Marion Kreith told her daughter Cuba’s Forgotten Jewels co-director Judy Kreith about her escape from Nazi-occupied Belgium and her teenage years in 1940s Havana. Marion and other refugees interviewed in the film recall their lives in wartime Havana: the draw of Cuban food, music and dance, its language and people, and also the challenges they faced in this unfamiliar land.

Features an original soundtrack of Cuban and Jewish music.

Film provided by The National Center for Jewish Film, www.jewishfilm.org.
Not Rated
Genre
Documentary, Jewish Culture, History, Culture Vulture
Runtime
46
Language
English, Spanish, Hebrew
Director
Judy Kreith, Robin Truesdale
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