#BeginsWithMe - Teaching about the consequences of Political Rhetoric
Fri, 11/18/2016 - 10:19am
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Several months ago in my former senior high school class, students were introduced to the ideas of illiberalism. When discussing this issue, students are faced with how governments will apply laws and acts during times of crisis, as well as everyday life, that would limit or suspend civil liberties of any individual or group.
Five Resources to Teach Kristallnacht with Testimony
Wed, 11/02/2016 - 2:15pm
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The Kristallnacht pogrom was a critical turning point on the path to genocide, and all of our #IWitnessChat participants agreed that using testimony is a meaningful way for students to understand and connect with the event. Hearing survivors’ detailed accounts of this night makes it much more accessible to students.
Responsibility and Truthfulness are not Privileges but Duties
Mon, 08/15/2016 - 1:41pm
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Poland’s new right-wing government wants to change the way children in that country learn about the Holocaust, casting Poles as only victims or heroes. In this new narration, the Polish people were always helping the weak, were good neighbors and cared about minorities.
Religious Resistance in Auschwitz: The Sacrifice of Saint Kolbe
Fri, 08/12/2016 - 10:15am
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Maximilian Kolbe, born in Poland in 1894, was a Franciscan friar and Catholic priest. He spent most of his life studying theology and dedicating himself to the church, traveling across Europe and Asia during his lifetime.
The Memory of a Hero: Aristides de Sousa Mendes' Legacy Preserved in Testimony
Fri, 08/05/2016 - 9:52am
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Aristides de Sousa Mendes was a Portuguese diplomat stationed in Bordeaux in the late 1930s who issued tens of thousands of visas to Jewish families, in direct violation of anti-Jewish laws instituted by Portugal’s fascist government at the time. For this act of resistance, Sousa Mendes faced trials and conviction, leaving him to live out the rest of his life in poverty and disgrace, and his 15 children scattered all over Europe and the U.S.
Commemorating Yom HaShoah through Testimony
Tue, 05/03/2016 - 2:24pm
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Holocaust Remembrance Day, or Yom HaShoah as it’s known in Hebrew, commemorates and honors the victims and survivors of the Holocaust. This year, people around the world will remember the victims of the Holocaust May 4-5, 2016.
The Necessity of Finding the “Us” and Not Focusing on the “Them”
Wed, 04/27/2016 - 3:03pm
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News of the deadly bombs that ripped apart the Brussels airport terminal last month sent a shockwave through me. I know that line, that place. I have stood in that spot. The “what if” scenario is not what troubles me most, however.
Hovsana Kumjian sings ballad Der Zor Chollerende
10 Interesting Experiences in the Armenian Genocide Testimony Collection
Wed, 04/20/2016 - 7:53am
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As the indexer for USC Shoah Foundation’s Armenian Genocide Testimony Collection, I have to listen carefully to hundreds of testimonies assigning keywords to each minute so that these stories will be accessible in the Visual History Archive. Now just in time for the 101st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide we will be integrating an additional 155 indexed testimonies into the Archive. I thought this would be a fitting time to highlight some of the most interesting aspects of the 245 testimonies that will be available in the Visual History Archive Online.
Elsie Taft on the Great Fire of Smyna
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