The Jerusalem Post

How Curious George’s Jewish creators saved him from the Nazis

- (Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)

Curious George – that curious little monkey – is beloved by millions of readers around the world. His adventures with the Man With the Yellow Hat impart important life lessons amid silliness and mayhem.

But many people probably don’t know that the children’s book character was actually born during very dark times. His two Jewish creators, Margret and H.A. Rey, fled the Nazis in 1940 – on homemade bicycles, no less – carrying their unpublishe­d manuscript­s with them.

The story of the couple’s daring escape is told in the documentar­y Monkey Business: The Story of Curious George’s Creators, which will premiere online and on on-demand platforms on Tuesday. At the same time, in a coincidenc­e of timing, the 2005 children’s book The Journey That Saved Curious George, will be mailed to eight- to 11-year-olds across the US this month through the PJ Library, a nonprofit that champions Jewish-themed children’s books.

No matter what the format, the story of Curious George’s creators is a fascinatin­g one.

Hans Augusto Rey (née Reyersbach) and Margret Waldstein first met in Hamburg in the 1920s. Margret, who had studied art at the influentia­l Bauhaus school and whose father was a member of the German parliament, left Germany for Brazil in 1935 to escape the rising tide of antisemiti­sm. Hans had been working in Rio de Janeiro as a bathtub salesman. The pair, who had met over a decade before in Germany, married that year and moved to Paris.

Hans worked as a cartoon illustrato­r for a newspaper, and Margret wrote copy. A French publisher was impressed with some of Hans’s animal drawings and suggested they work on a children’s book. Their first work was Raphael and the Nine Monkeys, and one of those monkeys would later become George.

By June 1940, the situation in Paris looked grim as the Third Reich’s troops began to close in. Millions of people flocked to trains heading to the south of the country, and the Reys could not get a ticket.

They didn’t own a car, so they decided to flee by bike, as Louise Borden explains in The Journey That Saved Curious George. The only problem: They couldn’t find a bike anywhere, either.

Somehow, Hans did something that sounds like a plot point in a children’s fantasy book: He made two bikes that night using spare parts. That incredible act likely saved their lives, as well as the future of the monkey that would become Curious George.

Before their escape, Margret rounded up all of their unpublishe­d children’s book manuscript­s, including one titled Fifi: The Adventures of a Monkey. The couple biked out of the city 48 hours before the Germans occupied Paris, and slept in barns and restaurant­s on their journey out of France.

As if in return for being saved, the curious little monkey character helped saved the Reys. As Monkey Business director Ema Ryan Yamazaki documents, whenever they were stopped at checkpoint­s during their escape, the couple brandished the manuscript­s and illustrati­ons to prove that they were not dangerous.

They eventually made their way to Lisbon, then back to Brazil, then to New York. Fifi became George, and in 1941, Houghton Mifflin published the first Curious George book. Since then more than 75 million Curious George books have been sold and the series has been translated into 19 languages. (He’s also the star of an animated PBS program for kids that premiered in 2006.)

H.A. Rey died in 1977, and Margaret Rey died in 1996.

Yamazaki, who grew up partially in the US and partially in Japan, said she was inspired by the Reys’ story of immigrant success.

“With a deepening refugee crisis and inflamed anti-immigrant rhetoric across the globe, the Reys’ story has become unexpected­ly more relevant in the two years I have been making the documentar­y,” she wrote last year. “The Reys’ refugee story has a happy ending, and represents the American dream at its best.” (JTA)

 ??  ?? PEOPLE ATTEND a ceremony last year commemorat­ing the victims slain at Babi Yar in Kiev in 1941.
PEOPLE ATTEND a ceremony last year commemorat­ing the victims slain at Babi Yar in Kiev in 1941.

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