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Melanie von Nagel
Benedictine nun

Melanie von Nagel

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Benedictine nun
A.K.A.
Muska Nagel Mother Jerome von Nagel Mussayassul
was
Work field
Gender
Female
Religion(s):
Place of birth
Berlin, Margraviate of Brandenburg
Place of death
Bethlehem, Connecticut, United States of America
Age
98 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Melanie von Nagel, from a portrait made in the 1940s

Melanie von Nagel (May 12, 1908 — June 27, 2006), known as Muska Nagel and as Mother Jerome von Nagel Mussayassul O.S.B., was a German-born baroness, literary translator, poet, and Roman Catholic nun at the Benedictine Abbey of Regina Laudis in Bethlehem, Connecticut.

Early life

Melanie Olivia Julie von Nagel zu Aichberg was born in Berlin, the daughter of General Major Karl Freiheer von Nagel and Mabel Dillon Nesmith von Nagel. Her father was Commander of the Bavarian First Heavy Cavalry Regiment and Chamberlain at the Bavarian Court; her mother was American, from New York. "Muska" Nagel was raised in Bavaria until her father's death in 1919. In widowhood Mabel von Nagel lived with her three daughters in Cairo and Florence.

Marriage

Melanie von Nagel lived in Munich during World War II, writing book reviews for Die Literatur. In 1944, she married Halil-beg Mussayassul, a Muslim portrait artist from Dagestan, based in Munich. During and after the war, they hosted Russian refugees and used their language skills to help in camps for displaced persons. The couple moved to New York in 1940s, and Halil-beg Mussayassul died there in 1949.

Literary career

As Muska Nagel, she published poetry and translations, and was recognized as a scholar of Paul Celan, and Ivan Illich. "Poetry, the lyrical, especially the smaller poems, like intimate sighs — can unite across time and space in a sense of shared humanity," she explained of her love of poetry in 2004. Poet Constance Hunting was her close friend and publisher, and she was a longtime correspondent of Italian writer Nicola Chiaromonte, Books of poetry by Nagel included Things That Surround Us (1987), Elements (1990), and Letters to the Interior (1996).

Religious life

In 1958, Nagel entered religious life as Sister Jerome von Nagel Mussayassul at the Benedictine Abbey of Regina Laudis in Bethlehem, Connecticut. She was a member of the Regina Laudis community with Mother Benedict Duss and Dolores Hart, and she served on the committee to revise the abbey's constitution. She was also expert at dying and spinning sheep's wool from the abbey's farm.

Mother Jerome von Nagel Mussayassul died at the Abbey of Regina Laudis in 2006, aged 98 years. A biography of Nagel, in German, was published in 2017. A collection of Nicola Chiaromonte's letters to Nagel was published in Italian in 2013.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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