One year after they were forced to flee their homes, Rohingya refugees add their voices to a new database of genocide testimonies.
Hungarian study: the Institute's video testimonies of Holocaust survivors boost student empathy
Martin Gruber is the 14th young Austrian to work at the Institute in lieu of military service
The Vienna native reflects on his 10-month tenure at the Institute, and the importance of the national reconciliation program that enables a select group of young Austrians to serve at organizations focused on Holocaust remembrance.
Teaching with Testimony Webinar: Navigating IWitness a (Re)Introduction
Participants will become familiar with the various pathways of IWitness by navigating through the site with USC Shoah Foundation educators. Participants will take away strategies of best practices for accessing testimony-based resources on IWitness and will learn how to build their own digital classroom within the site. Register now!
As a r
At 90, Dallas Holocaust survivor Max Glauben shared horrors of the Holocaust… something he’s been doing for decades… but never like this. “I didn’t have enough toes or fingers, to count the times I spoke,” he shared, while telling his story once again at a local production studio. “I’ve been doing it about 40 years.”
Sharing her father's story
A daughter discovers her father’s secret past and shares his story with the world.
USC Shoah Foundation showcases its programming in Aspen, Colo.
Over the course of three days, the Institute exhibited its recently recorded testimonies of Rohingya refugees; hosted an event in which a renowned artist painted a portrait of a Holocaust survivor before a live audience; and screened "The Girl and The Picture," the Institute’s award-winning documentary about the 1937 Nanjing Massacre.