Events

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  • 42nd Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches 70 Years Later: The Lingering Shadow of Wannsee

    Monroe Community College (MCC) 1000 E Henrietta Rd, Rochester, New York, United States

    Thank you for your interest and past participation in the 42nd Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches (ASC). Online registration is now available for this year’s conference.Please visit www.ascconf.org to visit our conference website, explore the presentation topics, and to register. Plenary and breakout sessions will feature scholars from around the world, including historians, ... Read more

  • Teacher Training Conference on Holocaust & Genocide Studies

    Congregation Ahavath Torah 240 Broad Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey

    Teaching the Holocaust in the Future Featuring: Dr. Eva Fogelman, author of Conscience and CourageDr. Mordechai Paldiel, former Director of the Department of the Righteous at Yad Vashem Hosts: Dr. Paul Winkler, New Jersey Commission on Holocaust EducationRabbi Shmuel Goldin, Ahavath Torah Other Speakers: Judith Alter Kallman, child survivor and author of A Candle in ... Read more

  • “Scribble Orchestra” Pays Tribute To Lakes Holocaust Survivors

    Windermere Library Ellerthwaite Road, Windermere, United Kingdom

    “Scribble Orchestra” Pays Tribute To Lakes Holocaust Survivors Posted on July 4, 2013 by Jeanette A newly developed Holocaust Survivor exhibition centre in Windermere launches with an afternoon of songs and music on 12 July 2013 in the gardens of Windermere Library. The afternoon is dedicated to “The Boys” – the child Holocaust Survivors who ... Read more

  • 2014 Diversonomix Conference

    Columbia University Lerner Hall, 116th Street & Broadway, New York

    It is argued that the lingering effects of Mass Trauma (MTE) of genocide and slavery created a trauma response, unresolved grief and historical trauma (Brave Heart 1995) and post traumatic slave syndrome (Leary 2001). The effects of major past historical traumatic events have impact not only on the generation where the traumatic event occurred but the generations that follow.

  • Opening of the Judith S. Kestenberg Papers at the Library of Congress

    Join us in celebrating the legacy of Judith S. Kestenberg, a Jewish-Polish-American psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. Renowned for her pioneering work on the psychodynamics of bodily movement and her psychohistorical studies on the Holocaust, Dr. Kestenberg’s contributions have left an indelible mark on fields of mental health, movement behaviour research, dance/movement therapy and Holocaust studies.