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JMB Book Club with Anna Langfus Les bagages de sable (Bags of Sand)

Accompanying the Exhibition Claude Lanzmann: The Recordings (in German)

Read along! 

In her award-winning novel Les bagages de sable (Bags of Sand) from 1962, author Anna Langfus tells of the lasting effects of the Shoah on survivors and the impossibility of escaping the past. At the JMB Book Club, we are presenting this quiet, poetic text as part of the exhibition Claude Lanzmann: The Recordings and invite you to join us for a discussion!

Wed 18 Mar 2026, 6.30 pm

Map with all buildings that belong to the Jewish Museum Berlin. The W. M. Blumenthal Academy is marked in green

Where

W. M. Blumenthal Academy,
Klaus Mangold Auditorium
Fromet-und-Moses-Mendelssohn-Platz 1, 10969 Berlin
(Opposite the Museum)

It is the end of the 1940s, and a young woman wanders aimlessly through the city of Paris, following people in the metro, waiting on park benches for the next uncertain encounter. Maria survived deportation and concentration camps, emigrating from Poland to France after the war. Her everyday life is populated by dream figures, the dead members of her murdered family—next to whom the people around her themselves turn into ghostly apparitions.

This book club is moderated by translator Patricia Klobusiczky. In her afterword to the novel, which was published last year in her new translation into German by Die Andere Bibliothek, she writes:

“Perhaps it helps to remember that from the very beginning, this memory had to be fought for, individually and socially, legally and politically, and especially artistically, and that tradition, both historical and literary, must be reclaimed by each generation.”

German book cover of Anna Langfus, Gepäck aus Sand. Die andere Bibliothek, January 2025

Anna Langfus

Anna Langfus was born Anna-Regina Szternfinkiel in Lublin, Poland, in 1920, the daughter of an assimilated Jewish family. After graduating from high school, she moved with her husband Jakob Rajs to Verviers in Belgium, where she studied textile engineering at the local polytechnic university. When war broke out in 1939, the couple was in Poland and was deported to the Lublin ghetto by the German occupiers. Szternfinkiel’s husband and parents were murdered, but she herself managed to escape. In 1946, she left Poland and settled in France, where she worked as a mathematics teacher. She married Aron Langfus, whom she had already known in Poland. As one of the first Jewish survivors of the Shoah, she began to write about it in French. She received the Prix Goncourt in 1962 for her novel Les bagages de sable. Anna Langfus, whose work is now mentioned in the same breath as Primo Levi and Elie Wiesel, died in 1966 at the age of only 46.

Anna Langfus, 1966; Copyright: CC BY-SA 3.0

Patricia Klobusiczky 

Patricia Klobusiczky studied literary translation in Düsseldorf and worked for many years as an editor for Rowohlt Verlag. Since 2006, she has been working as a freelance presenter and translator from French and English into German, translating works by classic modern authors such as Jean Prévost and Henri-Pierre Roché, as well as contemporary writers such as Marie Darrieussecq, Sophie Divry, Hélène Gestern, and Ruth Zylberman.

In cooperation with the French Embassy in Germany

Visualization of an audio track as a waveform (pale red amplitudes on a black background).

Exhibition Claude Lanzmann: The Recordings: Features & Programs

Exhibition Webpage

Claude Lanzmann: The Recordings: 28 Nov 2025 to 12 Apr 2026

Accompanying Events & Tours

Exhibition opening, public tours, screenings, JMB book club and other events related to the exhibition: find all dates in our calendar

Conference

Offerings for Groups

See also

Where, when, what?

  • WhenWed 18 Mar 2026, 6.30 pm
  • Where W. M. Blumenthal Academy,
    Klaus Mangold Auditorium
    Fromet-und-Moses-Mendelssohn-Platz 1, 10969 Berlin
    (Opposite the Museum)
    See location on map
  • Entry fee

    6 €, reduced rate 3 € – Booking opens soon in our ticket shop.

Links to topics that may be of interest to you

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