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Book details
  • Genre:BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY
  • SubGenre:Cultural, Ethnic & Regional / General
  • Language:English
  • Pages:96
  • eBook ISBN:9781098351991

Nana's Story

from Egypt to America

by Joyce de Botton

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Overview

This moving memoir captures the struggle and loneliness of a newly married Egyptian Jewish girl settling in America after being suddenly exiled from her birth land in Egypt. It is a grandmother's story detailing the wars she lived through in Alexandria and her challenging journey to becoming a fulfilled American grandmother. Told with humor and a lot of heart, this is the everyman immigrant story."

A beautiful, necessary book by a talented and humane writer who teaches us about the vibrant and exceptional life of Egypt's Jewish community, the struggles they endured, and their journeys to new homes around the world."- Alain de Botton


Description

This moving memoir captures the struggle and loneliness of a newly married Egyptian Jewish girl settling in America after being suddenly exiled from her birth land in Egypt. It is a grandmother's story, detailing the wars she lived through in Alexandria and her challenging journey to becoming a fulfilled American grandmother. Told with humor and a lot of heart, this is the everyman immigrant story. 

"I wrote my story for my grandchildren to understand that I grew up as a jewish citizen in Egypt, living a wonderful childhood among a large, loving family. In Alexandria, I had many friends of different nationalities with whom I bonded during my studies in a French private girls school. But the Suez Canal war in 1956 changed my life which erased my Egyptian identity. I had to get married in a hurry to their Papi, an Italian citizen, who I had met on a beach. We came to America with a student visa because of his studies at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. I wanted my American grandchildren to read the difficult, lonely beginnings in my new country as a poor refugee who could not even speak English. I wanted my grandchildren to learn about our struggles to adapt and survive without any money in America. I have described our life with humor so that they do not get bored.  My story is the heritage that I leave them and they should know how lucky they are to be born Americans."


About the author
Joyce received her Baccalaureate as a philosophy major in 1956 from the Lycee Francais in Alexandria, Egypt. With the onset of the Suez Canal War later that same year, she married and was forced to leave her family and her birth land, immigrating to America. While raising her three children, she was often asked to speak publicly about her life as an Egyptian Jew. During the Coronavirus pandemic, she decided to tell her story about her childhood in Egypt, her family exile, and her struggle to start a new life in America.