Sarah Kaminsky is a screenwriter, author, and actor. Born in Algeria in 1979 to an Ashkenazi Jewish father from Argentina and a Tuareg Algerian mother, Kaminsky immigrated to France at the age of three. Her 2009 book about her father, Adolfo Kaminsky, has sold widely throughout the world and has been translated into more than nine languages, including English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, German, Turkish, Hebrew, Chinese, and Arabic. Her screenplays and writing credits are numerous and noteworthy, including for recent films "The Braid" (2023) and "Farewell, Mr. Haffmann" (2021), which earned an Audience Award at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival. She lives in Paris.
Mike Mitchell is an award-winning translator of French and German who has been active as a translator for over thirty years and recently completed his one hundredth translation. He is the recipient of the Schlegel-Tieck Prize for translations of German works published in Britain, has won the British Comparative Literature Association translation competition twice for translations from German and received commendation for a translation from French. He has been shortlisted for many awards including the French-American Translation Prize, the Weidenfeld prize, the Aristeion prize, the Kurt Wolff prize, and the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger. In 2012, the Austrian Ministry of Education, Art and Culture, awarded him a lifetime achievement award as a translator of literary works. He lives in Scotland.
Adolfo Kaminsky (b. 1925 in Buenos Aires, Argentina; d. 2023 in Paris) made his living as a photographer in various fields: postcards, advertising photos, but also photo reportage on industry (for example, the coal mines of the North and the French sugar refineries). He took numerous photographs of works of art for exhibition catalogs and posters, and he was the regular photographer for the painters who were the precursors of kinetic art such as Antonio Asis, Jesús Rafael Soto, Carmelo Ardenquin, and Yacov Agam. As a specialist for giant-format photography he produced photos for film sets for Alexandre Trauner, the set designer for Marcel Carné, René Clair and others. Late in life, he began to publicly show some of the thousands of artistic photographs he took since the 1940s, the first being a major exhibition in 2019 at the Museum of Art and History of Judaism in Paris.
Deborah Dash Moore is an American Jewish historian, author of nine books, and is Jonathan Freedman Distinguished University Professor of History and Professor of Judaic Studies at the University of Michigan. Her influential scholarship in the field of modern Jewish history focuses on Jewish urban life, women and gender, the creation of ethnic identity, and Jewish photographers. Her books have regularly garnered awards, including a National Jewish Book Award. Her most recent book is Walkers in the City: Jewish Street Photographers of Midcentury New York (2023). She also serves as Editor in Chief of the ten-volume The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization.