Events

See what’s coming up at the library, or you may be interested in past events.

Hybrid Curators’ Talk: Holocaust Letters with Christine Schmidt, Sandra Lipner

Join the curators of the Holocaust and Genocide Research Partnership’s latest exhibition, Holocaust Letters, to learn more about how they developed the exhibition. Their talk will discuss key letters on display, the ethics and practice of curating personal document collections, the role of the archive in mediating the past, and reflections on co-curating with historians and families.

Orwell Festival 2023: Orwell & Antisemitism

The Wiener Holocaust Library The Wiener Holocaust Library, London, United Kingdom

As part of this year's Orwell Festival, join George Orwell’s official biographer D. J. Taylor (Orwell: The New Life), historian Dan Stone (The Holocaust: An Unfinished History) and chair Jean Seaton (Director, The Orwell
Foundation) for this special Orwell Festival event at The Wiener Holocaust Library as they consider attitudes to Jews, Jewishness and antisemitism in George Orwell’s writing and journalism.   

Virtual Exhibition Panel: Jewish Archives, Artefacts and Memory in Transit

With the soon-to-launched virtual Holocaust Letters exhibition as a starting point, this virtual panel will explore new ways and research into thinking about archives, artifacts and other primary sources, including material sources as well as those not held in traditional archives to help us gain deeper insight into the history of Jewish refugees in transit and the knowledge those migrants possessed, produced, transmitted, or lost.

In Conversation: Lord Daniel Finkelstein and Professor Philippe Sands

Beveridge Hall Beveridge Hall, Senate House, University of London, Malet Street, London, United Kingdom

An event to mark the publication of Lord Daniel Finkelstein’s Hitler, Stalin, Mum and Dad: A Family Memoir of Miraculous Survival, in conversation with Professor Philippe Sands

£10

Refugee Week 2023: The Erosion of Human Rights Protections for Refugees in the UK, with René Cassin

The Wiener Holocaust Library The Wiener Holocaust Library, London, United Kingdom

In this joint event, René Cassin and the Wiener Library build on the 2023 Refugee Week’s theme of ‘compassion’ and explore the UK’s attitudes and commitment to refugees over time – from attitudes, policy and practical implementation – and a hopeful and positive change to the current situation.

Living Memory: Photographic Exhibition and Slideshow, Reception with the artist

The Wiener Holocaust Library The Wiener Holocaust Library, London, United Kingdom

Produced during the summer of 2020, the Living Memory project showcases artist Catrine Val’s poignant and astonishing photographic portraits of London’s Jewish community. The project was produced during the profound dislocation caused by the pandemic and as the Holocaust begins to slip slowly from ‘living memory’.

Hybrid Lunchtime Exhibition Talk: Red Cross Messages from Nazi Germany, with Anthony Grenville

Red Cross messages had been introduced during the First World War, when an urgent need developed for a means that would re-establish the communications that had been severed by the conflict, for example between prisoners of war and their families at home. During the Second World War, as conventional means of communication were increasingly denied to Jews trapped in the Third Reich, Red Cross messages came to play a vital part in what remained of the contacts between those Jews and their family members who had escaped abroad; little systematic attention has, however, as yet been devoted to them.

Roma Voices: The Patrin, Testimony & Archive

The Wiener Holocaust Library The Wiener Holocaust Library, London, United Kingdom

A roundtable discussion with Brolly Productions focusing on the importance of celebrating and sharing testimonies from the Roma community.

Book Talk: From Discrimination to Death: Genocide Process through a Human Rights Lens

The Wiener Holocaust Library The Wiener Holocaust Library, London, United Kingdom

From Discrimination to Death studies the process of genocide through the human rights violations that occur during genocide. Using individual testimonies and in-depth multi-country field research from the Armenian Genocide, Holocaust and Cambodian Genocide, this book demonstrates that a pattern of specific escalating human rights abuses takes place in genocide.

Book talk: Depravity’s Rainbow: A Dark History of Space Travel

The Wiener Holocaust Library The Wiener Holocaust Library, London, United Kingdom

Depravity’s Rainbow examines the origins of rocketry and space exploration during the Holocaust, when nascent space technology was mobilised by the Nazi regime as a weapon which they hoped might turn the tide of war.

Heritage Fund The Association of Jewish Refugees Federal Foreign Office
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