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About The Book
Description
Author
World War I has been recorded from many points of view: correspondent poet politician and soldier. Comments from a nun living in a foreign country during the hostilities however can provide new insights. Isoline Jones was born in 1876 in England and attended the boarding school at Tildonk Belgium run by the Ursuline sisters. She eventually converted to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism and made her perpetual vows in 1907 as a member of the Ursuline community. Her religious name was Mother MarieGeorgine. In August 1914 German forces invaded Belgium and occupied the convent and school and her impressions of the war years are preserved in a series of letters written in the form of a diary. The siege of Antwerp the plight of refugees interaction with the German soldiers and the hectic daily life of the convent were recorded by Mother Marie Georgine. Events occurring throughout Belgium did not escape her attention and she did not avoid describing the brutality of war. Although sections of herdiary have appeared in print this is the first publication of Mother Marie Georgines entire diary. Her impressions of World War I offer new perspectives on this tragic event--Publisher description.