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Monday, September 21, 2009
7:30 p.m. Mabel Brown Room Young Student Center Keene State College "An Evening with Holocaust Survivor Gerda Weissmann Klein"
Gerda Weissmann's life changed forever in 1939 when, during her fifteenth year, German troops invaded her home in Beilsko, Poland. Both Gerda and her brother Arthur were separated from their parents and sent to slave-labor camps. The horror of that day remained forever ingrained in Gerda's memory - it was the last time she would ever see her family. Never losing hope, Gerda's resilience supported her through three successive years in slave-labor camps and a 350-mile forced death-march in which 2,000 women were subjected to exposure, starvation, and arbitrary execution. Throughout, Gerda never lost the will to survive. In 1945, she is rescued at the point of starvation by her future husband, Kurt Kelin, and American intelligence officer. Gerda Weissmann's account of living through the Holocaust is documented in her autobiography, All But My Life and in the film, One Survivor Remembers (available from the Cohen Center). |
Click on poster to download
– available for downloading and printing for your own use to publicize this program to your school, class, or organization.
Original size is approximately 16 x 10 in. but they can also be printed at 11 x 8.5 in. as small
posters or as handouts for students.
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| Previous Lectures in the Series | ||||||||
| 11th Holocaust Memorial Lecture | ||||||||
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Monday, September 22, 2008 7:30 p.m. Mabel Brown Room, Young Student Center, Keene State College Professor Christopher Browning, "Holocaust Denial in the Courtroom: The Historian as Expert Witness" |
Professor Browning is the Frank Porter Graham Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.He is known for his groundbreaking book, Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final solution in Poland, and for his role as an expert witness in the libel defense of professor Deborah Lipstadt of Emory University, who was sued by Holocaust denier David Irving in the late 1990s |
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Monday, September 17, 2007
An Evening with
Ernest W. Michel Michel arrived in the United States as a displaced person in 1946. After working for a small town newspaper, he began a 50-year career with the United Jewish Appeal (UJA). He served as executive vice president of the UJA-Federation of New York, the largest citywide fund-raising organization in the country, from 1970 to 1989. In 1960, as chairman of the first Auschwitz Survivors Dinner held in this country, he was invited to meet President Dwight Eisenhower at the White House. He was chairman of the World Gathering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors in Israel in 1981, which brought together 6,000 survivors from 23 countries and four continents. His autobiography, Promises to Keep, was published in 1993.
Promises to Keep, One Man’s Journey Against Incredible Odds!
By Ernest W. Michel Foreword by Leon Uris Now Available at The Cohen Center for Holocaust Studies, Mason Library Price: $15.00 (please make checks payable to: CCHS)
Hubert Locke In 1970 he cofounded the Annual Scholars' Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches, an interfaith, interdisciplinary, and international gathering of scholars, educators, clergy, and community leaders devoted to remembering, learning, and teaching the lessons of the Holocaust. It is the oldest continuing meeting of its kind in the world and the first to bring together Jewish and Christian scholars. Professor Locke will offer brief reflections on the need for and significance of Holocaust and genocide studies in our contemporary world. |
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Monday, September 18, 2006 9th Annual Holocaust Memorial Lecture |
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Wolf Kahn, artist and refugee from Nazi Germany, "Growing Up Privileged, and Jewish, in Nazi Germany" |
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The Cohen Center is proud to host American painter Wolf Kahn as its 2006 Holocaust Memorial Lecturer. Wolf Kahn was born in Stuttgart, Germany, in 1927, the son of musician and Stuttgart Symphony Orchestra conductor Emil Kahn and a mother who would die in a sanatorium when he was five. Sent to Frankfurt at three-years of age to live with his grandmother, he fled Nazi Germany in 1939—soon after the Kristallnacht pogrom of November 1938—to live as an eleven-year-old refugee in England. In 1940 Kahn moved to the United States to join his father, two brothers, and a sister who had already settled in New York City. He became a student at New York’s High School of Music and Art. After serving in the U.S. Navy, Kahn used the G.I. Bill to study with the well-known teacher and abstract expressionist Hans Hofmann, becoming Hofmann’s studio assistant. He later joined other former Hofmann students to form The Hansa, a cooperative gallery. Kahn’s highly regarded landscapes are characterized as "pure constructions of color and light," evoking "a world of timeless beauty." Please join us for this ninth in our series of annual lectures. Links for Wolf Kahn: |
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8th annual Holocaust Memorial Lecture Peter Hayes Hayes (PhD, Yale, 1982), the Theodore Z. Weiss Professor of Holocaust Studies at Northwestern University, is the author of over forty articles and of several books, including Industry and Ideology: IG Farben in the Nazi Era (Cambridge University Press, 1987; New Edition, 2001), a study that was awarded the 1988 Biennial Book Prize of the Conference Group for Central European History (a section of the American Historical Association), and From Cooperation to Complicity: Degussa in the Third Reich (Cambridge University Press, 2004). He is currently working on two other books: Profits and Persecution: German Big Business and the Holocaust and The Failure of a Generation: German Elites and National Socialism. Teaching at Northwestern University since 1980, Hayes is also the consummate educator. In 1988 he received Northwestern's Distinguished Teaching Award and in 2003 the Alumni Association's Excellence in Teaching Award. Hayes directs the Summer Institute on the Holocaust and Jewish Civilization at Northwestern (funded by the Holocaust Educational Foundation), he serves on the Academic Committee of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, and he is a member of the Academic Advisory Board of the German Society for Business History (Gesellschaft für Unternehmensgeschichte). Why study the Holocaust through the lens of Germany's business community? Hayes believes that it is far too easy to identify the Nazi villains and thereby focus the blame for the Third Reich's unmatched atrocities on the likes of Himmler, Heydrich, Göring, Goebbels, and, of course, Hitler. What of the thousands who adjusted their principles for these men? By focusing his research on the mindset of a powerful corporate elite, Hayes fixes our attention on the moral dimension of human conduct, showing how otherwise respectable men compromised their ethics by placing either their own interests or those of their firms above those of the regime's victims. The result is troubling in that these are men who we, too, would have respected. What should that tell us? |
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Sidore Lecture Series "We have to believe that we can reduce it, that we can fight it when it happens, and we can strive for the day when it is eliminated." – Jerry Fowler Jerry Fowler Through conferences, public programs, special exhibitions, teacher training, public speaking and other vehicles, the Committee works to carry out its mandate. Special attention is currently being paid to the urgent crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan. In January 2004, the Committee issued a "Genocide Warning" for Darfur, and in May, Mr. Fowler visited Sudanese refugee camps in Chad to obtain first-hand accounts of the situation. In July, the Committee declared a "Genocide Emergency" for Darfur, the first time in its history that it used this highest level of alert. Other programs have focused on the threats of genocide in Bosnia, East Timor, and Chechnya. The Committee recently produced and distributed a film about the Rwandan genocide, featuring Canadian General Romeo Dallaire, to educators, activists, and policymakers in more than 30 countries, including the entire U.S. Congress and more than 1,000 U.S. high school teachers. Mr. Fowler previously was legislative counsel for the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, where he worked on a broad array of human rights issues, including international justice and refugee and asylum policy. His publications include the essay, "Out of that Darkness: Preventing Genocide in the 21st Century," in the 2nd edition of Century of Genocide: Eyewitness Accounts and Critical Views (Routledge, 2004). Mr. Fowler has taught at George Mason University Law School and George Washington University Law School, and has been a Scholar-in-Residence at American University's summer Human Rights Institute. He is a graduate of Stanford Law School and Princeton University. From 1983 to 1987, he was stationed in Germany as an officer in the United States Army. From 1993 to 1995, he served as Special Litigation Counsel for the U.S. Department of Justice. |
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