"...I can't thank you enough for putting together our event with Ilse...They [the students] will never forget what they heard that day, and they will pass on Ilse's story so that it will be not lost..." ~Emily (Teacher)

Archive

Date

October 10th, 2009

2009 Auction Items

Be sure to check out our updated list of items for our auction on Saturday, October 24. It will begin at 7pm at the JCC Klein Branch at 10100 Jamison Ave, Philadelphia.

October 7th

Rwanda genocide suspect arrested, extradited

IIdephonse Nizeyimana, one of of the four top accused in connection with the 1994 genocide of 1 million Tutsis in Rwanda has been arrested and extradited to Arusha, Tanzania where a U.N.-sponsored International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda will try him for his role in the genocide, including sending a group of soldiers to murder Rwanda's former Queen, Rosalie Gicanda.

Via CNN.

October 3rd

Last surviving leader of the Warsaw ghetto uprising has passed away

Marek Edelman, a leader in the April-May 1943 Warsaw ghetto uprisings, has passed away at 90 in Poland. Edelman dedicated his life to the defense of human life, dignity and freedom and was honored with the French Legion of Honor and Poland's highest civilian distinction, the Order of the White Eagle and held an honorary doctorate degree from Yale University.
Read the obituary here.

September 24th

Itka Zygmuntowicz biography expanded

It is our pleasure to provide you with an expanded biography and the full Shoah Foundation interview of Itka Zygmuntowicz.
View her biography.

September 14th

"Being Jewish In France" to be screened at Philadelphia Jewish Film Festival

Being Jewish in France, written and directed by Yves Jeuland, documents the history of French Jews from the period of the Enlightenment, when they were declared free, equal "brothers" to the virulent anti-Semitism of the Dreyfus affair and the stain of the Vichy regime's treatment of Jews.

September 13th

Review: Hotel Rwanda, Directed by Terry George

Hotel Rwanda (2004), directed by Terry George is based on the true-story events surrounding the heroic efforts of Paul Rusesabagina (played by Don Cheadle), an assistant manager at the Mille Collines international hotel in Kigali, Rwanda to save 1268 friends, neighbors and fellow countrymen caught up in the middle of the bloody genocide.

September 11th

Harvard Crimson accidentally published Holocaust-denying ad

Harvard University's student newspaper, the Harvard Crimson, accidentally published an advertisement that questioning the reality of the Holocaust on Tuesday September 8th, 2009. Originally rejected during the summer for publishing, the advertisement apparently "fell through the cracks" but Crimson President Maxwell L.

September 9th

A new book examines long-term psychological effects of Holocaust trauma

A new book by Natan P.F. Kellermann, PhD, Project Development Director at the National Israeli Center for Psychosocial Support of Holocaust Survivors and the Second Generation (AMCHA), presents a comprehensive and new overview of the long-term psychological effects and treatment of Holocaust trauma.

US Congress officially recognizes its role in the fate of the M.S. St. Louis

The United States Senate unanimously passed Resolution 111 on April 23, 2009 to officially recognize that June 6, 2009 was the 70th anniversary of the United States refusing entry to the M.S. St. Louis passenger liner which carried 937 passengers.

Father Patrick Desbois: A Priest on a Holocaust Mission

"It is 30 seconds to midnight." This sentence says it all within the context of Holocaust studies. As Holocaust survivors age and pass away, their stories are taken with them to the grave. However, another side of this are aging witnesses to the Holocaust horrors who often stood by as mass killings took place.