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Call for Applications: USC Shoah Foundation Non-residential Scholar Program
USC Shoah Foundation – The Institute for Visual History and Education is pleased to invite applications from scholars of all levels for its Non-residential Scholar Program. The Program is intended to enable full access to the USC Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive (VHA) to support scholarly research with survivor testimonies housed in the archive.
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Ghetto Fighters’ Museum, USC Shoah Foundation Bring Lessons of Courageous Danish Rescue Operation to Classrooms
Middle and high school students around the world are exploring the themes of resistance, solidarity and resilience using an innovative new film-based curriculum produced by the USC Shoah Foundation and The Ghetto Fighters’ House Museum in Israel, one of the first Holocaust museums in the world.
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Invitación para presentación de propuestas: 2024 Conferencia de la INoGS
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Invitación para presentación de propuestas
IX Conferencia Internacional de la INoGS
Genocidio y comunidades sobrevivientes: agencia, resistencia, reconocimiento
23-26 de junio de 2024
University of Southern California Los Ángeles
En el territorio ancestral y no cedido de las naciones de Tongva y Kizh
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In Telling Jan Karski's Story of Holocaust Resistance, Filmmakers Turned to Testimony
How could the Nazis have systematically murdered six million Jews, and how could the world have stood passive as it happened?
These momentous questions are neither rhetorical nor unanswerable to Jan Karski, a Polish Catholic diplomat who brought eye-witness reports of Nazi atrocities to Western leaders as early as 1942, and who is the subject of a new film, Remember This.
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We Remember Dr. Richard Hovannisian, 90, an Esteemed Historian and Chronicler of the Armenian Genocide
The USC Shoah Foundation mourns the passing of our friend Dr. Richard Gable Hovannisian, a scholar who devoted his life to chronicling the 1915 Armenian Genocide and donated the more than 1,000 survivor and witness testimonies he amassed to the USC Shoah Foundation. He was 90.
Born to Armenian Genocide survivors in Tulare, California, in 1932, Dr. Hovannisian was initially discouraged from learning his parents’ language and knew little about Armenian history.
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