Tereska Torrès


Tereska Torrès was a French writer. She is credited with writing the first pulp to candidly address lesbian relationships in America. However Torres felt that the book was relatively innocent and she had been exploited.

Life

Torrès was born Tereska Szwarc to the Jewish Polish sculptor Marek Szwarc and his wife Guina Pinkus in Paris. She had to flee her native country in 1940 via Lisbon to England when France surrendered to Nazi Germany after the Battle of France, while her father, serving in the Polish Armed Forces in the West, was evacuated from La Rochelle by the British Home Fleet. Her family was able to escape because they received visas signed by Vice-Consul Manuel Vieira Braga in Bayonne, France, in June 1940.
At the age of 19 Torrès enlisted in Charles de Gaulle's Free French Forces Volontaires Françaises Corps and worked as a secretary in de Gaulle's headquarters in London. In October 1944 when she was five months pregnant, her first husband 20-year-old Georges Torrès, stepson of pre-war French-Jewish Prime Minister Léon Blum, was killed while fighting with the 2nd Free French Armoured Division in Lorraine.
In 1947 Torrès accompanied American novelist Meyer Levin while he filmed the documentary Lo Tafhidunu about Jewish refugees who fled Poland after the Holocaust and tried to reach Palestine. Her diary about her experiences on this journey from Poland's destroyed cities through the displaced persons camps in Western Europe to Israel and her imprisonment there by British Forces were published so far only in German as Unerschrocken.
In 1948 Torrès married Meyer Levin in Paris. He urged her to publish the diary she wrote while serving in the Free French Forces. In 1950 Torrès published in the United States a fictional account of her wartime experiences under the title Women's Barracks, which "quickly became the first paperback original bestseller" selling over 2 million copies in its first five years. In total 4 million copies of the book were sold in the United States and it was translated into 13 different languages. In 1952 Women's Barracks was selected as an example of how paperback books were promoting moral degeneracy, by the House Select Committee on Current Pornographic Materials. When the book was republished by The Feminist Press in New York in 2003, it was acclaimed as having inspired a whole new genre of lesbian and feminist writing in the US.
Torrès did not allow Women's Barracks to be published in France because she felt readers might come away thinking that the Free French Forces acted frivolously in London. Instead her wartime diary was published as Une Française Libre. She is credited with writing the first pulp to candidly address lesbian relationships in America. However, Torrès felt that the book was innocent and she had been exploited by her publishers.
In 1963, Torrès accompanied Levin to Ethiopia, where he filmed "the Fellashas" which was the first documentary about the life of Beta Israel Jews in Ambover.
Torrès wrote some further 14 books, which were often translated by her husband into English.
Her still unpublished diary notebooks are preserved by Boston University.
She was one of a few surviving members of the "Volontaires françaises" – the women's army corps of the Free French Forces.

Works

In remembrance for this French heroine, a public garden, is dedicated to her memory in Paris, France. This memorial park is situated in the center of the French capital, between the Champs-Elysées and the Parc Monceau, in the 8th arrondissement of Paris.