2018 Disseminator Grant: Project Title: Unraveling the Past To
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Hannah Garza, Mechelen, Belgium, January 2016
Understanding the Recent Phenomena of Holocaust Remembrance in the Form of National Holocaust Museums and Memorials in Belgium, France, and Germany Hannah Elizabeth Garza Universiteit van Amsterdam Graduate School of Humanities A thesis submitted for the degree of Masters in Holocaust and Genocide Studies Spring 2017 !1 Abstract This thesis will focus on national Holocaust museums and memorials in Europe, in specific regards to the national Holocaust museums of Belgium and France, and the national Holocaust memorial of Germany. This dissertation will begin with a brief overview of the scholars used within each chapter, along with a discussion on the development of national Holocaust museums in Europe in the introduction chapter. Following the introduction, the first chapter will discuss the Kazerne Dossin Memorial Museum in Mechelen, Belgium. Chapter two will then cover the Mémorial de la Shoah in Paris, France. Finally, chapter three will then focus on the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in conjunction with its underground information center in Berlin, Germany. This thesis will endeavor to explore the themes represented in each museum in relation to German compliance, and the role of the bystanders from each Nation. The goal is to understand how each of these national institutions discussed within the text, portray their involvement in the events of the Holocaust and Second World War by way of State compliance and the actions of their bystanders. Through the initiatives of the museum and memorials published catalogs, personal -
In This Issue
July/August 2015 Tammuz Elul, 5775 Mazel Tov to all our Religious school students for another great year of learning. IN THIS ISSUE Special kudos to the Zayin Class who graduated in Host an Oneg…………………………. 2 President’s Column …………………. 3 May: Rabbi’s Column ……………………… 4 David Arlen Holiday Services ………..…………… 7 Ari Bernstein Yahrzeits July ……………………… 9 Adam Belkin-Rosen Yahrzeits August …………………10 Contributions ……………………..... 11 Rose Chusid In Memoriam ………………………… 13 Leah Lurie Education Director’s Column ...….. 14 Benjamin Margolis Gala Update …………………………. 16 Nathan Stein Kosher Korner ……………………. 17 Sisterhood News ………..…….…… 18 Jack Hyams Gift Shop …………………………… 19 Philly Soul Arena Football Team … 20 UPCOMING EVENTS Film Festival Schedule ……………. 21 Classes w/ Rabbi Jacob …….…….. 26 Please visit Donation Form……………………….. 27 orshalom.com/ Monthly Calendar ……………….. 28 calendar for the latest Advertisers ……………………….. 30 information about Office Hours: Monday 10:30 to 3:30 events. Tuesday 11 to 4 Wednesday 10 to 3 Thursday 10 to 3 September Horizons Friday 10:30 to 3:30 articles will be due August 21st Office Closed June 30 July 3 HORIZONS July/August 2015 Tammuz Elul, 5775 TD Bank Affinity Program One of our best opportunities to increase Or Shalom’s revenue is through TD Bank. The bank has a program which pays Or Shalom a percentage of the total balances of the accounts that are enrolled in Horizons is published monthly. Material the program and affiliated with Or Shalom. If you already have an submitted for publication may be edited account at TD Bank, you can easily enroll your account in the Affinity for style, length and content. Program by calling Jeff Salvo, the TD Bank branch manager in Devon. -
Despite All Odds, They Survived, Persisted — and Thrived Despite All Odds, They Survived, Persisted — and Thrived
The Hidden® Child VOL. XXVII 2019 PUBLISHED BY HIDDEN CHILD FOUNDATION /ADL DESPITE ALL ODDS, THEY SURVIVED, PERSISTED — AND THRIVED DESPITE ALL ODDS, THEY SURVIVED, PERSISTED — AND THRIVED FROM HUNTED ESCAPEE TO FEARFUL REFUGEE: POLAND, 1935-1946 Anna Rabkin hen the mass slaughter of Jews ended, the remnants’ sole desire was to go 3 back to ‘normalcy.’ Children yearned for the return of their parents and their previous family life. For most child survivors, this wasn’t to be. As WEva Fogelman says, “Liberation was not an exhilarating moment. To learn that one is all alone in the world is to move from one nightmarish world to another.” A MISCHLING’S STORY Anna Rabkin writes, “After years of living with fear and deprivation, what did I imagine Maren Friedman peace would bring? Foremost, I hoped it would mean the end of hunger and a return to 9 school. Although I clutched at the hope that our parents would return, the fatalistic per- son I had become knew deep down it was improbable.” Maren Friedman, a mischling who lived openly with her sister and Jewish mother in wartime Germany states, “My father, who had been captured by the Russians and been a prisoner of war in Siberia, MY LIFE returned to Kiel in 1949. I had yearned for his return and had the fantasy that now that Rivka Pardes Bimbaum the war was over and he was home, all would be well. That was not the way it turned out.” Rebecca Birnbaum had both her parents by war’s end. She was able to return to 12 school one month after the liberation of Brussels, and to this day, she considers herself among the luckiest of all hidden children. -
HERC 1082 Educators Week Program 9-20
HERC Invites You to Our Virtual Events for Statewide Recognition of Holocaust Education Week November 9th-12th Monday, November 9 – Dr. Mark Wygoda, speaks about “In the Shadow of the Swastika”, a book based upon his father’s memoirs of WWII. Sponsored by He was known first as a Warsaw ghetto smuggler, then as Comandante Enrico. He traveled under false identity papers and worked at a German border patrol station. Throughout the years of the Holocaust, Hermann Wygoda lived a life of narrow escapes, daring masquerades, and battles Co-sponsored by that almost defy reason. FREE to attend virtually online via www.facebook.com/events/353647666012056/ Tuesday, November 10 – Dr. Oren Baruch Stier – Professor of Religious Studies and Director, FIU Holocaust and Genocide Studies Program Kristallnacht: The End of the Beginning and the Beginning of the End The state-sponsored, “spontaneous,” premeditated pogrom on November 9-10, 1938 – known widely as Kristallnacht, or the Night of Broken Glass – represents both a historic and symbolic turning point in the Nazi assault against European Jewry. Commemorated widely, it remains relevant to anyone interested in understanding the evolution of hate. Join FIU’s Oren Stier and HERC as we explore the significance of this date and reflect on why it continues to matter. Sponsored by Zoom link invite coming soon Thursday, November 12 – Dr. Robert Watson author The Nazi Titanic: The Incredible Untold Story of a Doomed Ship in World War II. Built in 1927, the German ocean liner SS Cap Arcona was the greatest ship since Co-sponsored by the RMS Titanic and one of the most celebrated luxury liners in the world. -
Europe and the World in the Face of the Holocaust
EUROPE AND THE WORLD subject IN THE FACE OF THE HOLOCAUST – PASSIVITY AND COMPLICITY Context6. Societies in all European countries, death camps. Others actively helped the whether fighting against the Germans, Germans in such campaigns ‘in the field’ occupied by or collaborating with them, or carried out in France, the Baltic States, neutral ones, faced an enormous challenge Romania, Hungary, Ukraine and elsewhere. in the face of the genocide committed against Jews: how to react to such an enormous After the German attack on France in June crime? The attitudes of specific nations as well 1940, the country was divided into two zones: as reactions of the governments of the occupied Northern – under German occupation, and countries and the Nazi-free world to the Holocaust Southern – under the jurisdiction of the French continue to be a subject of scholarly interest and state commonly known as Vichy France (La France great controversy at the same time. de Vichy or Le Régime de Vichy) collaborating with the Germans. Of its own accord, the Vichy government Some of them, as noted in the previous work sheet, initiated anti-Jewish legislation and in October guided by various humanitarian, religious, political, 1940 and June 1941 – with consent from head of personal or financial motives, became involved in state Marshal Philippe Petain – issued the Statuts aiding Jews. There were also those, however, who des Juifs which applied in both parts of France and exploited the situation of Jews for material gain, its overseas territories. They specified criteria for engaged in blackmail, denunciation and even determining Jewish origin and prohibited Jews murder. -
Felix Nussbaum (1904 – 1944)
SOMMAIRE I/ FELIX NUSSBAUM (1904 – 1944) ................................................................................3 Présentation de l’exposition ............................................................................... 3 Déroulé de l’exposition ...................................................................................... 3 La Nouvelle Objectivité ...................................................................................... 4 II/ OBJECTIFS ET PISTES PEDAGOGIQUES ................................................................6 Objectifs pédagogiques ..................................................................................... 6 Lien avec les piliers du socle commun .............................................................. 6 Organiser le temps scolaire ............................................................................... 7 Thématiques transversales ................................................................................ 8 Propositions pour le Primaire ............................................................................. 9 Questionnaire sur Felix Nussbaum .................................................................. 12 Propositions pour le Secondaire ...................................................................... 14 III/ POUR ALLER PLUS LOIN ........................................................................................ 17 1/ Felix Nussbaum et ses maîtres ......................................................................... 17 2/ L’art et la Shoah -
The Schlenke Collection Featuring Felix Nussbaum
Inge Jaehner THE SCHLENKE COLLECTION FEATURING FELIX NUSSBAUM A lot has been published in recent years about collectors, especially art collec- tors. And it has not always focused just on the art collections, but has also ex- plored the different motivations that fuel a collector’s passion. “The Obsessed” is the title Peter Sager gave his book on “Art Collectors from Aachen to Tokyo”.1 “Collectors are manic, voracious, given to behaving imperiously. Or they are no- ble,” writes Peter Dittmar.2 Big collectors are often thought of as profit-seeking power players who indulge their vanity, extroverted personalities driven by the desire to have a building named after them. Irmgard and Hubert Schlenke belong to an entirely different category of collec- tors. While they have never sought the public limelight, they have shared their collection with the public. For theirs is a very special kind of collection. At no time did the Schlenkes ever set their sights on the conventional. Their focus has always been on artists many of whom would otherwise, and unjustly, have remained uncelebrated by the art world, who they felt deserved saving from a fate of oblivion. Thus, their collection has artists from the “Lost Generation” at its centre. As a collector, Hubert Schlenke is driven by very personal motiva- tions, by an interest in people and their life experiences. It is people’s stories that he collects, so that the artistic quality of a piece is not its only attraction for him. It is this humanitarian edge to his collection that makes it so special. -
Thomas Hengstenberg Felix Nussbaum and His Time
PREFACE Thomas Hengstenberg FELIX NUSSBAUM AND HIS TIME Featuring more than 140 works, this exhibit draws our attention to a generation of artists born in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who set out to engage in their craft in the changing, unpredictable times pre- and post-WW I. Many of them enjoyed great success in the brief period between the world wars. Keen experimenters and with a strong will to effect change, they had significant influ- ence on the cultural and social life of the day. However, their hopes that the tur- bulent, crisis-ridden decades of the early 20th century would be followed by an era of stability for a society renewed in freedom were ultimately dashed when the Nazis gained power in Germany. Like most creative thinkers and innovators of that time, artists too became a target of the powers that be if they refused to have their works be misused for propaganda purposes or to be enlisted and monopolised for the systemised national arts programme of the dictatorship. Even before 1933 nationalistic and national-socialistic groups had defamed these artists as “anti-German” and sub- jected them to the full destructive force of a powerful movement that opposed and rallied against all things “non-Aryan” or stood in contradiction to the political and philosophical views of the party. What began as rhetorical confrontations, censorships and book burnings, progressively intensified into systematic psy- chological terror and brutal assaults against non-conformists and those per- ceived to be different, and ultimately ended in the persecution, forced migration and genocide of millions. -
2018 Disseminator Grant
2018 Disseminator Grant: Project Title: Unraveling the Past to Create a Better and Inclusive Future Jacqueline Torres-Quinones, Ed.D [email protected] South Dade Senior High School 7701 ONCE I THOUGHT THAT ANTI-SEMITISM HAD ENDED; TODAY IT IS CLEAR TO ME THAT IT WILL PROBABLY NEVER END. - ELIE WIESEL, JEWISH SURVIVOR For Information concerning ideas with Impact opportunities including Adapter and Disseminator grants, please contact: Debra Alamo, interim Program Manager Ideas with Impact The Education Fund 305-558-4544, Ext 105 Email: [email protected] www.educationfund.org Acknowledgment: First and foremost, the Unraveling the Past to Create a Better and Inclusive Future Grant, has led to the development of a practical and relevant Holocaust unit filled with various lessons that can be chunked and accessible resources for secondary teachers to use. The supportive guidance was provide by Eudelio Ferrer-Gari , a social science guru- [email protected] from Dr. Rolando Espinosa K-8 Center, The Echoes and Reflections, and the Anti-Defamation League Organizations. Within this grant, teachers will be able to acquire knowledge of how to help students understand the Holocaust better and assist them to make critical thinking connective decisions as well of how they can make a positive difference today- when dealing with challenging social and political issues. Resources used throughout the grant: Founded in 2005, Echoes & Reflections is a comprehensive Holocaust education program that delivers professional development and a rich array of resources for teachers to help students make connections to the past, gain relevant insight into human dilemmas and difficult social challenges, and to determine their roles and responsibility in the world around them. -
Aanspraak June 2018 English
June 2018 AanspraakAfdeling Verzetsdeelnemers en Oorlogsgetroffenen Wim Aloserij, the last survivor of the Cap Arcona shipwreck bears no grudges Contents Page 4 Speaking for your benefit. Page 5 Remembrance speech of 4 May 2018 at Dam Square, Amsterdam. By Director of the Netherlands Institute for Social Research (SCP) Kim Putters. Page 6-9 The last survivor of the Cap Arcona shipwreck bears no grudges. Wim Aloserij survived the concentration camps in Amersfoort, Husum, Neuengamme and the bombing of the SS Cap Arcona prison ship by the Allies. Page 10-12 ‘The bombing of the Bezuidenhout neighbourhood ruined me physically, but not mentally.’ As a child, in 1945, former Dutch Labour Party (PvdA) mayor Hans Ouwerkerk lost his father and was severely injured by a British bomb. Page 13-16 Not having a ‘J’ stamped on my identity card gave me my freedom back. The Jewish dressmaker Marga was able to do resistance work undetected from Amsterdam. Aanspraak - June 2018 - 2 Page 17 News from the Client Council. Page 18 Questions and answers. No rights may be derived from this text. Translation: SVB, Amstelveen. Aanspraak - June 2018 - 3 Speaking for your benefit In Italy, every secondary school pupil is encouraged Meditate that this came about: to read ‘Se questo è un uomo’ (1947) by the Italian I commend these words to you, Jewish author Primo Levi. Levi was a chemist and Carve them in your hearts a survivor of Auschwitz. At home, in the street, Going to bed, rising: This book, which was published in English under Repeat them to your children. -
Análisis De Los Hundimientos De Buques De Carga Y Pasaje Durante La Segunda Guerra Mundial
Análisis de los hundimientos de buques de carga y 4 de febrero pasaje durante la 2013 Segunda Guerra Mundial Autor: Angel Sevillano Maldonado Tutor: Francesc Xavier Martínez de Osés Diplomatura en Navegación Marítima Trabajo Final de Carrera Facultad de Náutica de Barcelona – UPC DEDICATORIA A mis hermanas, por todo el apoyo e interés mostrado hacia este trabajo. AGRADECIMIENTOS Al primer oficial Néstor Rodríguez, del buque Playa de Alcudia, por darme a conocer muchos de los desastres analizados en el trabajo, al profesor Xavier Martínez de Osés, por su gran colaboración y a todos aquellos que me han brindado su ayuda cuando ha sido necesario. Gracias a todos. Análisis de los hundimientos de buques de carga y pasaje durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial INDICE 1. INTRODUCCIÓN ................................................................................... 9 2. LA SEGUNDA GUERRA MUNDIAL .......................................................10 2.1 INTRODUCCIÓN ...............................................................................10 2.2 PRINCIPALES ESCENARIOS DEL TEATRO BÉLICO..........................12 2.2.1 LA GUERRA DEL PACIFICO ..............................................................12 2.2.2 LA GUERRA SUBMARINA DEL MAR BÁLTICO.............................17 3. ANÁLISIS DE LOS NAUFRAGIOS.........................................................20 3.1 MV WILHELM GUSTLOFF..................................................................20 3.1.1 DATOS GENERALES DEL BUQUE ..............................................20 3.1.2 -
Felix Nussbaum (1904-1944)
Felix Nussbaum (1904-1944) Dix fiches d’œuvres à exploiter en classe Les Deux Juifs (Intérieur de la synagogue d’Osnabrück) 1926 Huile sur toile, H. 115 – L. 99 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt de la Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung. Souvenir de Norderney 1929 Huile sur toile, H.98 – L. 113,5 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt de la Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung. Destruction (2) 1933 Huile sur toile, H. 53 – L. 76 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, dépôt d’une collection particulière. Le Réfugié (1) (Vision européenne) 1939 Huile sur toile, H. 60 – L. 74 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt d’Irmgard et Hubert Schlenke, Ochtrup. Esquisse pour La Synagogue du camp 1940 Crayon et encre de Chine sur papier, H. 18 – L. 28 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt de la Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung. La Tempête 1941 Huile sur toile, H. 87 – L. 101 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt d’une collection particulière. Autoportrait à la clé 1941 (Verso du tableau Landschaft bei Rom n° 153) Huile sur bois, H. 47,2 – L. 35,1 cm Tel-Aviv, Museum of Art, don de Philippe Aisinber et Maurice Tzwern, Bruxelles. Peur (Autoportrait avec sa nièce Marianne) 1941 Huile sur toile, H. 51 – L. 39,5 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt de la Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung. Autoportrait au passeport juif vers 1943 Huile sur toile, H. 56 – L. 49 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt de la Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung. Triomphe de la mort (Les squelettes jouent une danse) 18 avril 1944 Huile sur toile, H. 100 – L. 150 cm Osnabrück, Felix-Nussbaum-Haus, prêt de la Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung.