Cécile Furtado-Heine


Cécile Furtado-Heine, born Cécile Charlotte Furtado, was a French philanthropist. She was born in Paris on March 6, 1821 and died on December 10, 1896.

Biography

Cécile Furtado was born in Paris on March 6, 1821 to a Jewish family of Sephardic ancestry.
Cecile's father Élie Furtado was the son of Joseph Furtado, the rabbi of Bayonne, and the nephew of Abraham Furtado, a banker in Paris and representative of the constituency of Bayonne in the central consistory in Paris. Abraham Furtado would also serve as secretary of Napoleon Bonaparte's "Grand Sanhedrin", a Jewish high court convened in Europe.
Cecile's mother Rose Fould was the daughter of Beer Léon Fould, the bank manager and mayor of Rocquencourt, near Versailles. Her maternal uncle, Achille Fould, would be the French Finance minister under Napoleon III.
Cécile was married on October 2, 1838 in Rocquencourt to the rich Frankfurt banker Charles Heine, the son of Salomon Heine and cousin of the German poet Heinrich Heine and the banker Michel Heine.
Widowed on July 4, 1865 at age 44, she inherited a considerable fortune. In Paris, she lived in a large mansion in the middle of a huge garden, at 28 rue de Monceau. Having no children, she adopted an orphan, Marguerite Laure Juliette dite Paule, who was possibly the biological daughter of Cécile's brother Paul Furtado-Fould and his mistress Marie-Julie Morel. Marguerite Paule married Michel-Aloys Ney, Duke of Elchingen in 1866, and later married Victor Masséna, Duke of Rivoli in 1882.
During the war of 1870, Cécile supported the Red Cross and organized an ambulance service for the repatriation of the wounded. In 1884, she created an annuity for a children's hospice in the 14th Arrondissement. The street where this establishment is located has been called Furtado-Heine Street since 1897. She financed other establishments, including a nursery school in the city of Bayonne and a nursery in Montrouge.
In 1895, at the return of the French expeditionary force of Madagascar, Cécile sought to relieve the fate of the sick soldiers. She bequeathed to the army her villa in Nice on the Promenade des Anglais as a convalescent home for officers; today that building is known as Villa Furtado-Heine. She was also responsible for the cost of maintaining the sick, the staff, and the building. She was also very generous to the Pasteur Institute. A bust representing her still adorns the hall of the Institute.
Cécile Furtado-Heine did not forget her co-religionists. She supported several Jewish charities and contributed to the construction of new synagogues in France and Belgium. The most beautiful of these synagogues is without doubt that of Versailles where two plates of red marble pay homage to her. She also underwrote the cost of stained glass windows at the Saint-Germain church of Grand-Chesnay on which Rocquencourt depends; they represent a Saint Cecilia and a Saint Napoleon. Her charitable activities and generosity earned her the rank of Officer of the Legion of Honor in 1896. At that time, it was still very rare for a woman to attain such an honor.
A few weeks after this appointment, Cécile Furtado-Heine died on December 10, 1896 in her castle Rocquencourt. Her death was marked by a public mourning which is associated with the President of the Republic, Felix Faure, ministers and the municipality of Paris. Zadoc Kahn, the chief rabbi of France, gave the eulogy at her funeral.

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