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Tehran Children: Tea with Author Mikhal Dekel

  • East Bay Media Center 1939 Addison Street Berkeley, CA, 94704 United States (map)
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UPDATE 2/20/2020: This event is fully booked!

DAC presents author Mikhal Dekel in a reading of her book "Tehran Children, A Holocaust Refugee Odyssey." The reading will be followed by a Q&A session. Come learn about the fascinating story of Polish Jews who went to Iran during the Holocaust. This event is free and open to public, but we ask that you register to attend. Refreshments will be served.


"Tehran Children is a gripping account of Holocaust survival unlike any other. Blending the genres of memoir, history, and travelogue, Mikhal Dekel traces… her father’s wartime footsteps across thousands of miles, from Poland, to Soviet Uzbekistan, Tehran and Palestine.”

—Tara Zahra, author of Great Departure: Mass Migration from Eastern Europe and The Making of the Free World

About the Author


Mikhal Dekel was born in Haifa, Israel, to a Holocaust refugee father and an Israeli-born mother. Over the course of seven intense years, she completed her mandatory military service, earned an L.L.B. from Tel Aviv University’s Buchmann School of Law, interned at the Tel Aviv State Attorney’s Office and joined the Israel Bar Association, before deciding to take a complete break. In New York, where traveled to regroup, she worked odd jobs, sat for hours at the MOMA before Manet’s Water Lilies, and eventually began a graduate program in English at the City College of New York and then a Doctoral program at Columbia University. She now lives in Manhattan with her family, teaches English and Comparative Literature at the City College and the CUNY Graduate Center, and directs CCNY’s Rifkind Center for the Humanities and Arts.

Tehran Children is the culmination of Mikhal’s decade-long journey to understand her father and the odyssey at the core of his young adulthood—an experience which he never talked about, though it informed every aspect of his being. His wartime odyssey was also part of a larger chapter in the history of World War II, that of refugees in Central Asia and the Middle East. The fact that most Polish Jews who survived the war had followed this path was virtually unknown at the time when she began writing.

Prior to Tehran Children, Mikhal had published two books: The Universal Jew: Masculinity, Modernity and the Zionist Moment and the Hebrew monograph Oedipus be-Kishinev (Oedipus in Kishinev). She has also published numerous articles and blogs on topics such as George Eliot’s Hebrew translations, tragedy and revenge in Israeli literature, and autism and the English novel. Her scholarly work has received support from the National Endowment of the Arts, the Mellon Foundation, and the Lady Davis Foundation, among others.

At CCNY, Mikhal teaches courses on Literature and Theory of Migrations; the Historical Memoir; Representations of Trauma; Law and Literature, and other topics. Mikhal also directs the Rifkind Center for the Humanities and Arts at CCNY, which under her leadership has supported faculty research, awarded fellowships and hosted talks, conferences and interdisciplinary seminars that seek to broaden academic conversation. Timothy Snyder, Susan Faludi, Maria Hinojosa and Keeanga Taylor have been recent speakers. For more info, visit rifkindcenter.org.

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