Subscribe to Print Edition | Wed., August 27, 2008 Av 26, 5768 | | Israel Time: 08:55 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Haaretz Toolbar
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Car Rental
Books Haaretz Magazine Business Real Estate Easy Start Travel Week's End Anglo File
Author of fake Holocaust memoir admits: I'm not even Jewish
By The Associated Press
Tags: Misha Defonseca, Holocaust 

It was a shock to Misha Defonseca's readers this year when she admitted that the best-selling story of her tortured childhood during the Holocaust was false, but her U.S. publisher saw it as an opportunity to undo a stinging, 7-year-old court judgment.

Jane Daniel says she never would have been ordered to pay Defonseca and her ghost writer $32.4 million over her handling of profits from "Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years" had the jury known the book was filled with lies.

Defonseca never lived with wolves to escape the Nazis, never killed a German soldier in self-defense, never walked 3,000 miles across Europe in search of her parents. Contrary to the book's claims, Defonseca admitted in February that she isn't even Jewish.
Advertisement
Daniel is asking a judge to throw out the verdict; a hearing is set for Thursday in Middlesex Superior Court.

"This is a case where everyone was so enamored and felt so much sympathy for the Holocaust survivor, it just overwhelmed everyone in the case, including the jury," Daniel said in an interview with The Associated Press. "Now to find out that the book was not true, that is fraud on the court."

Defonseca and her ghost writer, Vera Lee, said the truth of the 1997 book had no bearing on the jury's finding that Daniel cheated them out of profits.

"It has nothing to do with that," said Defonseca, 71, of Dudley.

"This credibility issue is something Jane is digging up now," Lee said. "That's not what the trial was about. It was about the fact that she cheated us."

Daniel met Defonseca in the 1990s while Daniel was doing publicity for a video company that had made a memorial video for Defonseca about her dog. "She said the reason she was so attached to dogs is because she had been so attached to wolves," Daniel recalled. Once she heard Defonseca tell her whole story, she asked her to write a book.

The harrowing tale of a little Jewish girl's survival became a best-seller in Europe, was translated into 18 languages, was turned into a feature film in France, and drew interest from the Walt Disney Co. and Oprah Winfrey.

But the book sold only 5,000 copies in the United States after Daniel had a falling out with Defonseca and Lee.

The two sued Daniel for breach of contract. In 2001, a Middlesex District Court jury found that Daniel had failed to promote the book as promised and had hidden profits. The jury awarded Defonseca $7.5 million and Lee $3.3 million, but those amounts were later tripled by a judge who found Daniel and her small publishing company, Mt. Ivy Press, had misled both women and tried to claim royalties herself by rewriting the book.

In a brief telephone interview, Defonseca would not discuss her admission that she made up most of the details of the book. In February she acknowledged that her book was a fantasy that she kept repeating.

"This story is mine. It is not actually reality, but my reality, my way of surviving," Defonseca said in a statement released by her lawyers.

Defonseca admitted the book was not true after a genealogical researcher working with Daniel on her own book about the case uncovered inconsistencies in her story, including records that showed Defonseca was baptized Catholic and had attended an elementary school in Schaarbeek, Belgium, in 1943, during a time in which she said in her book she was living with wolves in Ukraine.

Daniel's lawyers are asking a judge to overturn the jury's award because Defonseca "perpetrated a hoax" on Daniel, her publishing company, the public, the trial judge and a state appeals court that upheld the verdict. They said Defonseca directly violated a provision in her publishing contract with Daniel in which she affirmed that the content of the book was true.

"From the outset, she breached her contract, but nobody knew it until much later," said Brian McCormick, one of Daniel's lawyers.

Lee's attorney Frank Frisoli said too much time has gone by for Daniel to challenge the verdict now. Also, after the judgment, Daniel reached agreements with both Lee and Defonseca to settle with Daniel for far less than $32.4 million. Daniel said her father paid $425,000 to Defonseca, while Lee received $250,000 from a settlement Daniel received after suing her literary agent and has the right to sell her house in Gloucester.

Lee said that she warned Daniel several times during the writing of the book that some aspects of Defonseca's story were incredible, but that Daniel dismissed her concerns.

"I think she went along thinking she had a blockbuster and she didn't want to hear anything about it not possibly being true," Lee said.

When news of the hoax came out in February, however, Lee said that she had always believed Defonseca's stories and that and no research she did gave her a reason to do otherwise.

"She always maintained that this was truth as she recalled it, and I trusted that that was the case," Lee said then.

Daniel has said she could not fully research Defonseca's story before it was published because the woman claimed she did not know her parents' names, her birthday or where she was born.

Daniel acknowledges she had doubts about portions of Defonseca's story, but said she believed it after talking to Holocaust survivors.

"If you read a lot of Holocaust literature, all survivor stories are miraculous," she said.

Related articles:
  • Son of Nazi doctor seeks to donate father's money to Holocaust education
  • Nazi hunter: Lithuania hunts ex-partisans, lets war criminals roam free
  • Were Jewish partisans depicted in new Hollywood movie murderers or heroes?
  • Bookmark to del.icio.us  
     
    Swing Jews
    Jewish Democrats go hi-tech to fight anti-Obama 'hate mail.'
    Where's Rose?
    Missing girl's mother allegedly told husband to 'get rid of her.'
      1.   do u believe in miracles? 06:53  |  ClearCut 26/08/08
      2.   Walking a fine line? 10:44  |  Manny Goldstein 26/08/08
      3.   #3 Indrajaya - Valid point 10:48  |  Manny Goldstein 26/08/08
      4.   Fact or fiction? 11:30  |  Motic 26/08/08
      5.   Making up your own narrative 11:32  |  Joseph 26/08/08
      6.   Said and Arafat 11:35  |  Ben Azai 26/08/08
      7.   Congratulations Misha Defonesca 12:05  |  Paul Wood 26/08/08
      8.   #3 12:06  |  Sheikh Rattle & Roll 26/08/08
      9.   re: How many Holocaust stories real? 15:56  |  Victoria 26/08/08
      10.   # 25 16:16  |  David 26/08/08
      11.   #5 Palestinian History is a Fantasy 18:11  |  HB 26/08/08
      12.   #6 Ben Azai 18:19  |  HB 26/08/08
      13.   Re: #8 19:28  |  Sarah 26/08/08
      14.   #13 Sarah Kol Hakavod 19:50  |  Kevin 26/08/08
      15.   Ben Azai 20:31  |  Tony 26/08/08
      16.   #6 Arafat was born in Egypt 22:20  |  Diane 26/08/08
      17.   Ahmadinejad........ 22:23  |  tad chase 26/08/08
      18.   Deceitful Diane # 6 23:23  |  WYSIWYG 26/08/08
      19.   Reply to # 12 00:42  |  Ben Azai 27/08/08
      20.   Duped? 00:54  |  Jankele 27/08/08
      21.   Everyone wants to cash in. 00:58  |  Maki 27/08/08
     Read & React
    Peace Now: West Bank settlement construction nearly doubled this year
    Responses: 230
    Jewish Democrats go hi-tech to fight anti-Obama 'hate mail'
    Responses: 45
    Obama: World must press Iran before Israel strikes
    Responses: 123
    Israeli and American: Why Jews can have more than one home
    Responses: 68
    VIDEO: Barak puts Tel Aviv apartment up for sale for NIS 40 million
    Responses: 39


    More Headlines
    02:55 Police: Grandfather killed 4-year old because she was hard to care for
    02:26 Before her disappearance, Rose Pizem suffered 4 years of horror
    07:08 Young Egyptians are in no hurry to die for the homeland
    07:59 Eying one another, Iran and Israel shore up their navies
    07:22 ANALYSIS / Israel's political limbo is just as thorny for Rice
    08:25 Shalit's parents to attend rally near Gaza ahead of son's 22nd birthday
    07:20 U.S. judge orders release of testimony in Jewish American atomic spies trial
    08:23 Ever-changing stories of missing girl's grandfather burdened police
    07:44 At Democratic convention, Hillary Clinton urges voters to unite behind Obama
    01:51 Tel Aviv and Givatayim at war over local beauty spot
    03:20 China passes Germany to become No. 2 exporter to Israel
    07:23 Teva's Azilect proven to slow progression of Parkinson's disease
    07:29 Reputed mob bosses face murder, drugs, money laundering charges in U.S.
    Previous Editions
    Special Offers
    Advertisement
    Fattal Hotel Chain
    Perfectly located hotels on best resorts of Israel.
    Jewish Singles Personal Ads
    Find the love of your life on JDate.com
    MBA in Israel in English
    APPLY NOW! Limited spaces available
    Israel's Premier Real Estate Website
    www. israel-property.com
    Hebrew Summer courses
    From $39.95
    ISRAEL BONDS Build Israel
    Israel bonds - a multi-purpose way to celebrate Israel's 60th
    Eldan Rent a Car
    Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
    Junkyard
    Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
    Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | Underground | Site rules |
    Real Estate in Israel | Travel to Israel with Haaretz | Hotels Israel | Restaurants Israel | Tourist attractions Israel | Shops Israel
    birthright Israel | Search engine marketing
    Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
    © Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved