Friday Finds Me…Reflective
magikquilter October 30th, 2009
Some gorgeous winter denim toned finds today.
As I was leaving the store I spotted a brand spanking new Fiorelli handbag…I bought a slightly smaller one of these in a dark burgundy a year or so ago and paid over a hundred dollars for it. This bag has a patchwork effect with mock crocodile, suede and mock leather…absolutely stunning. The two pendant necklaces are gorgeous and I will be repurposing them into beaded necklaces..watch out I might hit you with a tutorial soon!
The most beautiful find though was the pashmina….a real pashmina of wool and silk and deliciously heavyweight. Oh for winter again! No …I will not wish my life away! I am looking forward to springlike days, but alas we seem to have fast forwarded into searingly hot summer weather.
Now if you look closely you might see in the above photo a tiny bit of a sewing machine manual on the bed…yes I finally unpacked the machine and read the manual for my new Brother Quilter’s Edition unbirthday present that my husband and I purchased on my birthday. [How Irish is that by the way...unbirthday lol?]
Okay so speaking of Irish my son found some of his ancestor’s descendents this week. We are so excited and happy to have found them …especially as we are migrants ourselves with very little family here to fall back on. I grew up without grandparents as such…mine were in England and Ireland respectively. Coming out here in the sixties must have been a huge thing for my parents and I know my father is interested now in later life to reconnect with his relatives. My husband has been here since we married in the eighties after meeting while he was here on a Worker’s Visa…he was much travelled and found it hard to settle in one place after we married but eventually after living in both the UK and Australia for some years we came back home.
So my son and I shall be researching the geneology of my side of the family and he is now much more aware now of his Russian ancestors and the origin of our name Levinsohn. He is in contact with Leah, a cousin his age, many times removed and Jennifer, who has two daughters a similar age to him. This is especially exciting to him as he has very little contact with any of his first cousins in the UK….I actually friended them on Facebook this week and was surprised that neither side had been in touch with the other before now on Facebook. Maye it is always that way …the ones who are left behind continue on and live their lives without knowledge of the feelings of isolation that people in the far flung countries often feel. Although one does not have to be thousands of miles away to be ignored…my own brother and sister have had nothing to do with us for many, many years. Why is it that is is harder to accept rejection when it is one’s own child than when one is rejected oneself? Oh well that is enough of that….we are self sufficient and an extremely tight family unit…many would wish for that and it makes Christmas somewhat easier every year!
Okay back to Leah and Jennifer and their families…I heard today that Jennifer’s ancestor …her great grandfather was Joshua, Christopher’s great great grandfather’s brother. Jennifer’s relatives sound so interesting. They were intellectuals, writers and poets….so Chris got it from all sides of the family…..its in the genes!
Isaac Levinsohn, my son’s great great grandfather is a fascinating character, he converted to Christianity, becoming a well respected Baptist preacher working with Charles Spurgeon. His work involved converting the Jewish people, often on their deathbeds, to Christianity….as you can imagine this caused enormous pain for the Levinsohn family in Russia…especially since he converted his brother Joshua! This meant that the Levinsohn name which was passed on by the male family members obviously lived on. Interesting that in Judaism I think I am right in saying that the mother passes the line on? But it would still have been the last of the Jewish Levinsohns. There is a lot of fascinating material to be read through and archived….just my son’s cup of tea! Interestingly I found through my research that Spurgeon’s College is in South London near to where my sister and mother in law now live.
Isaac and his family came from Kovno, Russia….later Lithuania and my son and I were especially concerned about any remaining descendents of Isaac’s extended family as the Kovno Jews were almost wiped off the face of the earth by the Natzis in WW 2. Before the war there were 35,000 to 40,000 Jewish residents of Kovno the capitol city of Lithuania …by the time the Soviet army liberated Kovno on August 1, 1944 only 500 had survived in forests or in bunkers; the Germans evacuated an additional 2,500 to concentration camps in Germany.
Another thing that really inspired us to research was the story of David Suchet’s family on Who Do You Think You Are? David traced some of his Jewish ancestors back to the Pale Of Settlement, which now houses a cemetry filled with the decrepit graves of a long forgotten Jewish community…once a hugely overpopulated area….. courtesy of the anti semitism of the 1800’s and later still the Natzis. When David Suchet visited The Pale of Settlement there was not one Jew remaining amongst the scattered communities there.
As I write this I am reminded of my very close friendship with Bettina and her family…..her children are as my chidren and I feel we are more than friends …we are indeed family. Bettina and her family are Jewish and both her parents and her husband’s family came to Australia as migrants. Indeed almost all of my friends now are fellow migrants and I am drawn to them….it is a peculiar life but it is our life and it is a life that my son and Isaac’s descendent’s now have as it seems that they all got out of Kovno before World War Two…and I so thank God for that.




Yet again, more wonderful thrifting ~ I love your finds.
I was at the hospital yesterday for xrays etc and have been told I can now part weight bear. I’ll still be using two crutches and since my ankle is still painful will only be walking about at home ~ but it’s a step in the right direction. I hope to reduce to one crutch and then walk unaided, over the next 2 months. All is going well at the moment.
The trip to the hospital was horrendous ~ a ten hour round trip for a brief 8 minutes with the consultant after the xrays were taken. Today I feel as if I’ve been runover by a steam roller ~ every part of me aches. I wont be doing much today, needless to say.
However, tomorrow I am going to see my new grandaughter ~ and I shall be taking the beuatiful quilt you made for her ~ thank you. I’ll take some photos.
Love Jan x
PS: the family history is fascinating.