Results Are In for 16th Annual Holocaust Art & Writing Contest
A Beloved Father’s Presence Preserved for Generations to Come
I adored my father and admired him greatly. Harold Eisenberg was a good man in every sense of the word. He spoke about his life in Opatow, Poland before World War II and even his experience during the Holocaust, but he also lived very much in the present, working hard to provide for his family.
Bringing Stories to Daylight
With nearly 52,000 interviews from survivors of the Holocaust and other genocides, the archive of audio-visual testimony assembled and maintained by USC Shoah Foundation is so abundant it would take at least 12 years to watch it from beginning to end.
And that’s assuming the footage would be rolling 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
When I started my new job here at the Institute, I was struck by this statistic, which adequately conveys the scope of this incredible resource.
Eighteen New Testimonies Recorded for Nanjing Massacre Collection
Go Back to School with USC Shoah Foundation Educational Resources
Documenting Life Histories
The 53,000 testimonies in the Visual History Archive from the USC Shoah Foundation tell a complete personal history of life before, during and after the interviewee’s firsthand experience with genocide.
These testimonies are an invaluable resource for humanity, as in addition to their experience through some of the darkest chapters of human history; the testimonies also recount happy memories of childhood and successes in life including careers, children and grandchildren.
Hungarian Students Use Visual History Archive in School Project “Jewish Fates on the Common Border”
Ukrainian Kids Create Art Inspired by Testimony for “Sources of Tolerance” Summer Camp
Pagination
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