In Actor Gal Gadot's Living Room, Schindler's List Survivor Inspires Generations

Thu, 04/20/2023 - 2:18pm
Actress Gal Gadot with Holocaust Survivor Celina Karp Biniaz. Photo credit: Tori Time/DWMA
Actress Gal Gadot with Holocaust Survivor Celina Karp Biniaz. Photo credit: Tori Time/DWMA

Wonder Woman star Gal Gadot opened her Los Angeles home to friends and family earlier this week to commemorate Yom HaShoah by hosting an intimate conversation with Holocaust survivor Celina Biniaz, the youngest female on Oskar Schindler’s famed list.

Brazilian Scholar Studies Testimonies Related to Anti-Nazi Resistance in Latin America

Thu, 04/20/2023 - 1:56pm

As the Nazis assumed power in Germany in 1933, many artists and intellectuals opposed to the regime sought refuge in Latin America, particularly in Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico.

Adela Bay recites a poem from Rivka Basman
Technical issues with the video? Let us know.
Voices from the Archive

One Youth Group, An Army, and Two Uprisings—The Resistance of Joseph Greenblatt

On the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, we remember a hero

Tue, 04/18/2023 - 2:51pm

Joseph Greenblatt believes it was the antisemitic taunts he endured throughout his childhood in Warsaw that led him to a life of resistance. He was a key player in the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, and then took on the Germans again, this time with the Polish Home Army in the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 — for which he later received a medal.

Greenblatt’s testimony, recorded in New York City in 1996, is contained in USC Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive.

Ben Ferencz (1920-2023): In His Own Words

Mon, 04/17/2023 - 12:57pm

In July 2020, Ben Ferencz, the last remaining Nuremberg prosecutor who died earlier this month, sat for a Dimensions in Testimony Education interview.

Below are excerpts from the three-day conversation, which was released today.

 

On his Place of Birth

Dimensions in Testimony Education Releases Interview with Nuremberg Prosecutor Ben Ferencz

Mon, 04/17/2023 - 11:10am

Ben Ferencz, the last remaining prosecutor from the Nuremberg Trials who passed away in Florida earlier this month, gave countless interviews over the course of his illustrious career.

But surely none was longer, or more technically challenging, than the three-day testimony he gave to USC Shoah Foundation at the height of the Covid pandemic in July 2020.

The need for social distancing necessitated that filming be done remotely, with boxes of sophisticated equipment shipped to Ferencz’s modest Florida home.

New Partnership to Integrate USC Shoah Foundation Testimonies into Latin American Curriculum

Mon, 04/17/2023 - 10:15am

USC Shoah Foundation and The Latin American Network for Education on the Shoah (Red LAES) today launch an educational partnership dedicated to the study, teaching, and dissemination of Spanish-language Holocaust testimonies in Latin America.

The new initiative, announced to coincide with Yom HaShoah, will undertake a range of innovative activities including the creation of a landing page on USC Shoah Foundation’s award-winning IWitness platform that will feature downloadable Spanish-language modules based on testimonies from the 56,000-strong Visual History Archive.

Theary Seng

A Little Girl in a Cambodian Prison Finds a Cruel Calling for Justice From The Killing Fields of Cambodia to a Life of Activism

Mon, 04/17/2023 - 5:00am
One morning in 1978, Theary Seng awoke alongside her younger brother in their prison cell in Boeng Rai Security Center, about 100 kilometers south of their hometown of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The children’s mother had been in the cell the night before, but now she was gone.
TAGS:
Voices from the Archive

Nearly 80 Years After The Holocaust, A Survivor Tells His Story

Wed, 04/12/2023 - 1:09pm
In St. Ottilien, Germany, in 1946: Irv, Taibel, Gerald, and Fay.
In St. Ottilien, Germany, in 1946: Irv, Taibel, Gerald, and Fay.
Gerald Szames is 2, maybe 3 years old. He is standing at the foot of the bed, looking at his mother. She is sick, propped up on a pile of pillows. He has other flashes of memories of life before the Nazis invaded his Polish shtetl of Trochenbrod in 1941, when he was four years old – his grandfather taking him to the mill, his father lifting him up to give him a candy and a kiss.
TAGS:
Gerald Szames photo gallery

Pages