Diana Lebacs
Diana Lebacs | |
---|---|
Born | Diana Melinda Lebacs 12 September 1947[1] |
Died | 11 July 2022 | (aged 74)
Nationality |
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Occupation(s) | Writer, actress, educator |
Years active | 1971–2022 |
Diana Melinda Lebacs (12 September 1947 – 11 July 2022) was a Curaçaoan educator, actress, and author, most known for her children's literature. She wrote in both Papiamento and Dutch. In 1976 she received the Zilveren Griffel (Silver Stylus) award, one of the Netherlands' highest honors for youth literature, for her book Nancho van Bonaire. In 2003 she earned the inaugural Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Caribisch Gebied (PBCCG Cultuurprijs, Prince Bernhard Caribbean Cultural Fund Prize) for her book Caimin's geheim and in 2007 she was honored as a Knight in the Order of Orange-Nassau.
Early life
[edit]Diana Melinda Lebacs was born on 12 September 1947 in the Chere Asile neighborhood of Willemstad, capital of the Territory of Curaçao. Her mother, Esther Amalia Doelwijt,[2] was Creole from Suriname and spoke Sranan Tongo, having moved to Curaçao at the age of eighteen.[3] Her father, Willem Mertjo Lebacs, was a chief customs officer who also worked as a carpenter and artistic woodcarver.[2] Willem's father was from Bandabou on Curaçao; he had completed his military service in Indonesia and married a Malay woman there before returning to Curaçao. Her grandmother never learned Dutch and only spoke the Malay language and Papiamento. As her parents could only communicate in Dutch, Lebacs grew up speaking Dutch and Papiamento at home.[3]
After Lebacs completed her primary education at the Philomena School,[3] she attended the María Immaculata Lyceum for her secondary studies.[2] During this time (1960–1961), she began writing novels for teenage girls. She also sang in a band called Teenage Shadows from 1963 to 1966.[2][4] In 1966, she graduated from the Willemstad Pedagogical Academy.[2] The play performed at the commencement ceremony, Regels voor ezels (Rules for Donkeys), was written by Lebacs.[3] The following year, she married Pacheco Domacassé, who had directed Teenage Shadows and was also a guitarist and singer.[2] He would later head the cultural section of the Education and Cultural Department of Bonaire.[5]
Career
[edit]In May 1968, Lebacs' mother died. In August, she and her husband embarked on a six-month tour of western Europe. During their travels, she began to write a novel, Sherry—het begin van een begin (Sherry—The Beginning of the Beginning), a coming of age story of an Antillean girl. The novel delved into the socio-economic development of the islands[5] and the labor strikes which occurred in conjunction with anticolonial uprisings in Curaçao in 1969.[2] That summer, she sent the book to Leopold Publishing in The Hague and waited six months for their response. After agreeing to publish the novel and completing the edits they wanted, Lebacs enrolled in a two-year Papiamento literary course in 1970 to gain a better insight into the lingua franca of her homeland. She wanted to publish children's stories in the language spoken by children in the Dutch Antilles.[6]
In 1971, Sherry premiered and two years later was translated into Finnish by the publisher Tammi. In 1973, Lebacs wrote a youth theater play, which was the first dramatization written in Papiamento in over twenty-five years. Buchi Wan pia fini (Buchi Wan Skinny Legs), premiered with her husband as director, was a critique of European education systems and featured live exchanges between the actors and the audience. After its debut, the play was presented several times in Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao[2] and published in 1974.[6] Her 1975 book Nancho van Bonaire earned the Zilveren Griffel (Silver Stylus) award in 1976, the first time the honor had been given to a non-European author.[2][7]
Lebacs continued working on several fronts simultaneously throughout the 1980s and 1990s. She published children's fiction in Dutch and Papiamento, educational textbooks for elementary students, developed television programs about the Spanish and Dutch colonization history of Curacao, and acted in two films, Famia kibrá and Boka Sarantonio (Sarantonio Bay).[2][8] She also participated in community projects including book fairs, workshops to end violence against women, and programs to protect the environment.[2][9] In 1994, Lebacs published her first novel for adults, De langste maand (The Longest Month), which evaluates disparities in traditional local values and Westernized expectations.[2]
In 2003 Lebacs earned the inaugural Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Caribisch Gebied (PBCCG Cultuurprijs, Prince Bernhard Caribbean Cultural Fund Prize) for her book Caimin's geheim (Caimin's Secret) and in 2007 was honored as a Knight in the Order of Orange-Nassau.[9] That same year, she completed her bachelor's degree in Papiamento at the University of the Netherlands Antilles and went on to earn her master's degree in 2011. Subsequently, she began teaching courses in Papiamento at the university for beginning students.[2] She was a winner of the 2012 Tapushi Literario prize.[10] In 2014, Lebacs debuted her first collection of poetry, Belumbe/De Waterlijn (The Waterline).[11]
Personal life
[edit]Lebacs and her husband Pacheco had two children.[2] Lebacs died from pancreatic cancer at a hospice in Willemstad on 11 July 2022 at the age of 74.[12][13] Pacheco had died in March 2022 at the age of 80.[14]
Partial bibliography
[edit]- Lebacs, Diana (1971). Sherry: het begin van een begin [Sherry, The Beginning of a Beginning] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. ISBN 90-258-3937-1.
- Lebacs, Diana (1975). Nancho van Bonaire [Nancho of Bonaire] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. OCLC 252457187.
- Lebacs, Diana (1976). Chinina-kome-Lubida (in Papiamento). Curaçao: Montero. OCLC 69338550.
- Lebacs, Diana (1977). Ken-ken pia di wesu (in Papiamento). Curaçao: Montero. OCLC 66361746.
- Lebacs, Diana (1977). Nancho Matroos [Nancho the Sailor] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. ISBN 978-9-025-83943-7.
- Lebacs, Diana (1979). Nancho Niemand [Nancho the Nobody] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. ISBN 978-9-025-83920-8.
- Lebacs, Diana (1982). Nancho Kapitein [Nancho the Captain] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. ISBN 978-9-025-83928-4.
- Lebacs, Diana (1983). Suikerriet Rosy [Sugarcane Rosy] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. ISBN 978-9-025-83930-7.
- Lebacs, Diana (1990). Lichten boven Klein Bonaire [Lights above Little Bonaire] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. ISBN 978-9-025-83959-8.
- Lebacs, Diana (1994). De langste maand [The Longest Month] (in Dutch). Amsterdam, the Netherlands: In de Knipscheer. ISBN 978-9-062-65388-1.
- Lebacs, Diana (2001). Caimin's geheim [Caimin's secret] (in Dutch). The Hague, The Netherlands: Leopold. ISBN 978-9-025-83488-3.
- Lebacs, Diana (2009). Waar is Olivier?/Unda Olivier ta? [Where is Olivier?] (in Dutch and Papiamento). Willemstad, Curaçao: Fundashon Editorial Sembra Buki. ISBN 978-9-990-41181-2.
- Lebacs, Diana (2014). Belumbe/De waterlijn [The Waterline] (in Dutch and Papiamento) (1st ed.). Haarlem, The Netherlands: In de Knipscheer. ISBN 978-90-6265-861-9.
- Lebacs, Diana (2016). Duizend leugens bruidstaart: roman [A thousand lies wedding cake] (in Dutch) (Eerste uitgave ed.). Haarlem, The Netherlands: In de Knipscheer. ISBN 978-90-6265-924-1.
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ "Diana Lebacs". Digital Library for Dutch Literature (in Dutch). Retrieved 2 December 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Rodríguez 2016.
- ^ a b c d Rutgers 2007, p. 96.
- ^ Rutgers 2007, pp. 96–97.
- ^ a b Rutgers 2007, p. 97.
- ^ a b Rutgers 2007, p. 98.
- ^ Amigoe 1976, p. 3.
- ^ Rutgers 2007, p. 101-102.
- ^ a b Repeating Islands 2017.
- ^ "Historia". Arte di Palabra. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
- ^ van Geemert 2015.
- ^ Drayer, Dick (13 July 2022). "Curaçaose auteur Diana Lebacs (74), 'strijder voor het Papiaments', overleden". Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (in Dutch). Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- ^ Redactie (12 July 2022). "Schrijfster en actrice Diana Lebacs (74) overleden". Curacao.nu (in Dutch). Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- ^ Drayer, Dick (23 March 2022). "Pacheco Domacassé (80) overleden op Curaçao". Bonaire.Nu (in Dutch). Retrieved 15 July 2022.
General and cited reference
[edit]- Rodríguez, Emilio Jorge (2016). "Lebacs, Diana (1947– ), fiction writer, actress, and playwright". In Knight, Franklin W.; Gates, Henry Louis Jr. (eds.). Dictionary of Caribbean and Afro–Latin American Biography. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-199-93580-2. – via Oxford University Press's Reference Online (subscription required)
- Rutgers, Wim (2007). "Hoofdstuk 5. Diana Lebacs". Bon dia! Met wie schrijfik? [Good Morning! Who do I write with? (Chapter 5. Diana Lebacs)] (PDF) (in Dutch) (2007, Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren ed.). Oranjestad, Aruba: Charuba. pp. 95–140. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 June 2016.
- van Geemert, Ko (21 April 2015). "Diana Lebacs in Nederland" [Diana Lebacs in the Netherlands]. Caraïbisch uitzicht (in Dutch). Leiden, The Netherlands: Werkgroep Caraïbische Letteren, Research Institute for History at Leiden University. Archived from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
- "Curaçaoan Writers Featured at Havana's International Book Fair". Repeating Islands. Puerto Rico. 3 March 2017. Archived from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
- "Onderscheiding voor kinderboek Diana Lebacs" [Award for children's book Diana Lebacs]. Amigoe (in Dutch). Willemstad, Curaçao. 21 June 1976. p. 3. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Diana Lebacs at Wikimedia Commons
- 1947 births
- 2022 deaths
- People from Willemstad
- Curaçao women
- Curaçao people of African descent
- Curaçao people of Surinamese descent
- Curaçao people of Malay descent
- 20th-century Dutch women writers
- 21st-century Dutch women writers
- Dutch women's rights activists
- South American environmentalists
- Knights of the Order of Orange-Nassau
- Academic staff of the University of Curaçao
- Deaths from pancreatic cancer in the Netherlands
- Papiamento-language writers