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X-WR-CALNAME:The Wiener Holocaust Library
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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The Wiener Holocaust Library
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TZID:Europe/London
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DTSTART:20210328T010000
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DTSTART:20211031T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210505T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210505T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092904
CREATED:20210310T110606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151322Z
UID:5049-1620239400-1620244800@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Event: Forced Labour and Genocide: Then and Now
DESCRIPTION:Uyghur men detained in a camp. \nThe Government of China is perpetrating human rights abuses on a massive scale in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (Uyghur Region)\, known to local people as East Turkistan\, targeting the Uyghur population and other Turkic and Muslim-majority peoples based on their religion and ethnicity. These abuses include arbitrary mass detention of an estimated range of 1 million to 1.8 million people and a programme of re-education and forced labour. This involves both detainee labour inside internment camps and prisons and multiple forms of involuntary labour at workplaces across the Region and cities across China. \nDetention in labour and concentration camps is not something new or unfamiliar to Jewish people. \nRené Cassin and The Wiener Holocaust Library invite you to listen to our speakers who discussed the issue of forced labour as a means of persecution and genocide used during the Nazi-era and more recently in China today. \nSpeakers:\nProfessor Johannes-Dieter Steinert\, Professor of Modern European History and Migration Studies\, University of Wolverhampton \nAdrian Zenz\, Senior Fellow in China studies at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation \nRahima Mahmut\, World Uyghur Congress and Stop Uyghur Genocide Campaign \nJoe Collins\, Co-Executive Director and Editor\, Yet Again \nWatch back now:\n \n 
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-event-forced-labour-and-genocide-then-and-now/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Uyghur-men-in-camp.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210506T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210506T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092904
CREATED:20210317T095145Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151322Z
UID:5083-1620327600-1620331200@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Talk: German Colonialism and its Aftermaths
DESCRIPTION:Part of The Wiener Holocaust Library’s Racism\, Antisemitism\, Colonialism and Genocide event series. \nGeneral Lieutenant Lothar von Trotha\, the chief military commander in German South-West Africa\, with his staff during the Herero uprising\, 1904. Bundesarchiv\, Bild 183-R27576 / Unknown / CC-BY-SA 3.0\, via Wikimedia Commons \nIn the late nineteenth century\, Germany rapidly acquired an overseas Empire that included substantial territories in Africa\, such as modern-day Tanzania\, Burundi\, Rwanda\, Namibia\, Togo and Cameroon\, and\, in the Pacific\, Papua New Guinea\, Samoa and the islands of Micronesia. The German colonial Empire became the third-largest global Empire and ​its territorial possessions were then ​confiscated after Germany’s defeat in the First World War. The brutality of German rule in parts of its ​empire\, notably during the genocide of the Herero and Nama in Namibia from 1904\, but also elsewhere\, can seem to foreshadow the events of the Holocaust. \nThis virtual event reflected upon the connections between German colonialism and later periods and its impact on ex-colonies and Germany in the twentieth century and today. The connections between this period of German colonialism and the Nazis’ racist imperialism were also explored: what were the continuities of personnel or ideology or practice? And what is the significance of these connections? The event also considered connections and comparisons between German imperialism and the imperialism of other European states\, as well as the way that the German Empire is remembered today in the ex-colonies and in Germany. \nAbout the speakers:\nJürgen Zimmerer is Professor of Global History at the University of Hamburg/Germany. From 2005 to 2017 he served as Founding President of the International Network of Genocide Scholars (INoGS) and from 2005 and 2011 as Editor/Senior Editor of the Journal of Genocide Research. His research interests include German Colonialism\, Comparative Genocide\, Colonialism and the Holocaust\, and Environmental Violence and Genocide. He is the author and editor of ten books and journal special issues\, including “German Rule\, African Subjects. State Aspirations and the Reality of Power in Colonial Namibia”\, which will be out in June 2021. \nSara Pugach is a Professor in the Department of History at California State University LA. Her research focuses on the tangled interconnections between various African countries and Germany in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In 2012\, she published Africa in Translation: A History of Colonial Linguistics in Germany and Beyond\, 1814 1945\, and her co-edited volume\, After the Imperialist Imagination: Two Decades of Research on Global Germany just appeared in 2020. Her next book\, African Students in the German Democratic Republic\, 1949-1975 is due in 2021. \nAdam A. Blackler is an assistant professor of history at the University of Wyoming. His forthcoming book\, currently titled An Imperial Homeland: Forging German Identity in Southwest Africa\, will appear in the Max Kade Research Institute of Pennsylvania State University Press’s book series\, “Germans Beyond Europe.” Among Dr Blackler’s most recent publications include a co-edited volume\, entitled After the Imperialist Imagination: Two Decades of Research on Global Germany and Its Legacies (Peter Lang)\, and a chapter\, entitled “The Consequences of Genocide in the Long Nineteenth Century\,” in the book series “A Cultural History of Genocide in the Long Nineteenth-Century” (Bloomsbury Press). He is presently researching a book project that explores the vibrant topography of Berlin’s parks\, market squares\, streets\, and municipal districts before and during the Weimar Republic. \nWatch back now:
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-talk-german-colonialism-and-its-aftermaths/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:Colonialism and Genocide,Racism and Antisemitism
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-R27576_Deutsch-Sudwestafrika_Herero-Aufstand.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210511T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210511T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092904
CREATED:20210317T095902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151310Z
UID:5088-1620759600-1620763200@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Book Talk: The Resistance Network
DESCRIPTION:A joint event with the Armenian Institute and The Wiener Holocaust Library. \nKhatchig Mouradian’s newly published book\, The Resistance Network\, is the history of an underground network of humanitarians\, missionaries\, and diplomats in Ottoman Syria who helped save the lives of thousands during the Armenian Genocide. \nMouradian challenges depictions of Armenians as passive victims of violence and subjects of humanitarianism\, demonstrating the key role they played in organizing a humanitarian resistance against the destruction of their people. Piecing together hundreds of accounts\, official documents\, and missionary records\, Mouradian presents a social history of genocide and resistance in wartime Aleppo and a network of transit and concentration camps stretching from Bab to Ras ul-Ain and Der Zor. \nHe ultimately argues that\, despite the violent and systematic mechanisms of control and destruction in the cities\, concentration camps\, and massacre sites in this region\, the genocide of the Armenians did not progress unhindered—unarmed resistance proved an important factor in saving countless lives. \nAbout the author: \nDr Khatchig Mouradian is a lecturer in Middle Eastern\, South Asian\, and African Studies (MESAAS) at Columbia University in the City of New York. He is the author of articles on genocide\, mass violence\, and unarmed resistance\, the co-editor of a forthcoming book in late Ottoman history\, and the editor of the peer-reviewed journal The Armenian Review. Mouradian holds a PhD in History from the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University and a graduate certificate in Conflict Resolution from UMass Boston. He is the recipient of a Calouste Gilbenkian Research Fellowship to write the history of the Armenian community in China in the 19th and 20th centuries (2014). He is also the recipient of the first Hrant Dink Justice and Freedom Award of the Organization of Istanbul Armenians (2014). He serves on the Executive Committee of the Society of Armenian Studies (SAS) since 2015. \nEvent guidelines: \n1. The Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email prior to the event. Please check your junk email folders. \n2. Please try and join 5 minutes before the event start time and we will let you into the room (do try and bear with us if this takes a few minutes). \n3. If you would like to ask a question during the event\, please type your question into the chat function\, and we will endeavour to answer as many questions as possible during the Q&A. Your webcam will not be seen during this event. \n4. The event will be recorded for the Library’s YouTube channel and will be shared at a later date.
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-book-talk-the-resistance-network/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:New and Noteworthy Books
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210512T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210512T160000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092904
CREATED:20210409T094027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151310Z
UID:5375-1620831600-1620835200@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual PhD and a Cup of Tea: Jews\, Christians\, and the Holocaust in a Christian Army Chaplain’s Account of the Liberation of Bergen-Belsen
DESCRIPTION:An eyewitness account of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen by Reverend David Stewart. Wiener Holocaust Library Collections. \nPart of The Wiener Holocaust Library’s PhD and a Cup of Tea doctoral seminar series. \nThe Crime of Belsen is a 58-page pamphlet in the collection of The Wiener Holocaust Library. It was written and published in Germany in July 1945 by the Reverend David Stewart\, a British army chaplain. A close reading of Reverend Stewart’s report reveals a unique account of the liberation of Bergen-Belsen and the post-liberation care of Holocaust survivors. By sharing Stewart’s writing and photographs\, this talk will explore how Stewart understood what he witnessed at Belsen\, including his recording of survivor testimony. It is a revealing example of how one Christian encountered Jews in the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust and how he first began to respond to its implications. \nAbout the speaker: \nRobert Thompson is a PhD student in the Hebrew and Jewish Studies Department at University College London. His research\, Liberators\, Occupiers\, Pastors: Christian Encounters with Holocaust Survivors in Germany\, 1945-1950\, is funded by a Wolfson Foundation Postgraduate Scholarship in the Humanities. Rob’s MA thesis was awarded Proxime Accessit by the Royal Historical Society for their 2020 Rees Davis Prize. \nEvent guidelines: \n1. The Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email prior to the event. Please check your junk email folders. \n2. Please try and join 5 minutes before the event start time and we will let you into the room (do try and bear with us if this takes a few minutes).
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-phd-and-a-cup-of-tea-jews-christians-and-the-holocaust-in-a-christian-army-chaplains-account-of-the-liberation-of-bergen-belsen/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:PhD and a Cup of Tea
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/CrimeofBelsen_1.jpg450x598.95.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210517T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210517T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092904
CREATED:20210329T133054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151310Z
UID:5222-1621278000-1621281600@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Book Talk: The Afterlives of Trauma
DESCRIPTION:Laura Levitt and Dawn Skorczewski in conversation with James Young\nThis panel discussion will consider questions about life after trauma\, violence\, and loss: what makes this possible? What is the role of art and literature in doing justice to these pasts and imagining different futures? What is the relationship between trauma and art or writing? Professor Dawn Skorczewski and Professor Laura Levitt will be led in conversation by Professor James Young. \nDawn Skorczewski’s Sieg Maandag: Life and Art in the Aftermath of Bergen-Belsen combines Sieg Maandag’s testimony and writings with his art\, giving voice to his experiences and creating a dialogue between trauma and art. Sieg Maandag (1937-2013) was 7 years old when he was liberated from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Separated from his parents\, he survived the war with his sister and 50 other Dutch children. A photo of Sieg walking beside a row of bodies in liberated Bergen-Belsen shocked the world when it appeared in Life magazine on May 9\, 1945. His mother used this photo to find him in Amsterdam after the war; his father never returned. After trying his hand at the family diamond trade and clothing design\, Sieg travelled extensively\, searching for life’s meanings. He found his true love\, Karen\, and eventually discovered his other true love—painting. He devoted the rest of his life to painting and ceramics in Amsterdam. In interviews\, he often remarked\, “I was always a painter.” In his haunting and healing paintings and ceramics\, Maandag expresses the suffering and joys of life in what Lawrence Langer terms the “afterdeath” of Bergen-Belsen. When art becomes a way to depict\, manage\, and transform trauma\, the work itself informs life. \nLaura Levitt’s The Objects That Remain is equal parts personal memoir and fascinating examination of the ways in which the material remains of violent crimes inform our experience of\, and thinking about\, trauma and loss. Considering artefacts in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and evidence in police storage facilities across the country\, Laura’s story moves between intimate trauma\, the story of an unsolved rape\, and genocide. Throughout\, she asks what it might mean to do justice to these violent pasts outside the juridical system or through historical empiricism\, which are the dominant ways in which we think about evidence from violent crimes and other highly traumatic events. Over the course of her investigation\, the author reveals how these objects that remain and the stories that surround them enable forms of intimacy. In this way\, she models for us a different kind of reckoning\, where justice is an animating process of telling and holding. \nAbout the speakers:\nDawn Skorczewski is Lecturer at Amsterdam University College\, and Research Professor of English Emerita at Brandeis University. Her research interests include the Holocaust\, psychoanalysis\, pedagogy\, poetry\, writing\, and trauma. Several recent articles address the Holocaust survivors of the Dutch Diamond Industry\, the interviewer’s role in Holocaust testimonies\, and Jan Karski’s interviews. Her 2012 work An Accident of Hope positions the therapy tapes of American poet Anne Sexton at the intersections of poetry\, trauma\, pedagogy\, and testimony. \nLaura Levitt is Professor of Religion\, Jewish Studies\, and Gender at Temple University where she has chaired the Religion Department and directed both the Jewish Studies and the Gender\, Sexuality and Women’s Studies Programs. Levitt is the author of The Objects that Remain (2020); American Jewish Loss after the Holocaust (2007); and Jews and Feminism: The Ambivalent Search for Home (1997) and a co-editor of Impossible Images: Contemporary Art After the Holocaust (2003) and Judaism Since Gender (1997). Levitt edits NYU Press’s North American Religions Series with Tracy Fessenden (Arizona State University) and David Harrington Watt (Haverford College). \nJames E. Young is Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of English and Judaic & Near Eastern Studies at the University of Massachusetts\, Amherst\, where he has taught since 1988\, and Founding Director of the Institute for Holocaust\, Genocide\, and Memory Studies at UMass Amherst. Professor Young has written widely on public art\, memorials\, and national memory. \nEvent guidelines:\n1. The Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email prior to the event. Please check junk email folders. \n2. Please try and join 5 minutes before the event start time and we will let you into the room (do try and bear with us if this takes a few minutes). \n3. If you would like to ask a question during the event\, please type your question into the chat function\, and we will endeavour to answer as many questions as possible during the Q&A. Your webcam will not be seen during this event. \n4. The event will be recorded for the Library’s YouTube channel and will be shared at a later date.
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-book-talk-the-afterlives-of-trauma-laura-levitt-and-dawn-skorczewski-in-conversation-with-james-young/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:New and Noteworthy Books
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210519T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210519T160000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092904
CREATED:20210421T105621Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151310Z
UID:5533-1621436400-1621440000@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual PhD and a Cup of Tea: Overt-covert recounting: deconstructing women’s personal memory narratives of sexual violence during the Holocaust
DESCRIPTION:Part of The Wiener Holocaust Library’s PhD and a Cup of Tea doctoral seminar series. \nEyewitness account by Janka Galambos entitled ‘Forced Women Labourer for the Argus Aeroplane Works in Berlin-Reinickendorf’. Testifying to the Truth\, Wiener Holocaust Library Collections. \nDrawing on survivor interviews housed in the USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive\, this presentation will highlight a range of ways in which Jewish women recount their first-hand memories of sexual(ised) violence during the Holocaust within a public Holocaust ‘testimony’ sharing context. In particular\, the talk will explore the vocabulary employed by the women so as to communicate their story of assault to an interviewer (and implied audience) and consider how an ‘overt-covert’ narrative may be conceptualised as a form of protective ‘sideways’ storytelling. How do women encode stories of sexual assault in the act of recounting them? What thematic vehicles emerge when ‘speaking private memory to public power’ (Theresa de Langis\, 2018)? How may a researcher de-code them? \nPlease note this talk will contain graphic descriptions of sexual assault. \nAbout the speaker: \nLauren Cantillon is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Culture\, Media & Creative Industries at King’s College London. Her research explores the ways in which Jewish women recount personal memory narratives of sexual(ised) violence during the Holocaust. She is the 2020/21 Katz Research Fellowship in Genocide Studies at the USC Shoah Foundation Centre for Advanced Genocide Research and a volunteer for the Wiener Holocaust Library. Her work on emotional regimes of memory and cultural production will feature in Covid-19\, the Second World War and the Idea of Britishness (forthcoming\, 2021). \nEvent guidelines: \n1. The Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email prior to the event. Please check your junk email folders. \n2. Please try and join 5 minutes before the event start time and we will let you into the room (do try and bear with us if this takes a few minutes).
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-phd-and-a-cup-of-tea-overt-covert-recounting-deconstructing-womens-personal-memory-narratives-of-sexual-violence-during-the-holocaust/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:PhD and a Cup of Tea
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210525T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210525T130000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092904
CREATED:20210419T142718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151310Z
UID:5498-1621944000-1621947600@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Primary Source Workshop for A-Level Students: Who was Responsible for the Holocaust?
DESCRIPTION:The accused at the Nuremberg Trial. The Nuremberg Trial was a trial that prosecuted the major Nazi war criminals for their crimes throughout the Second World War\, including the Holocaust\, in October-November 1946. Wiener Holocaust Library Collections. \nIn this workshop\, aimed at A-Level History students\, The Wiener Holocaust Library’s Barbara Warnock and Roxzann Baker will use documents from the Library’s unique archive of material on the Nazi era and the Holocaust to explore the question of responsibility for the Holocaust. A-Level history coursework\, essays and exams frequently pose this question\, and the primary sources contained within the Library’s archives can shed light on various themes connected to the topic\, including the role of Hitler\, Himmler and senior Nazis; the role of collaborators\, and also the issue of the significance of the operation of the Nazi state. \nThis workshop will use primary sources to explore these themes and also examine issues around the use and reliability of primary sources. \nDr Barbara Warnock is Senior Curator and Head of Education at The Wiener Holocaust Library \nRoxzann Baker is The Holocaust Explained Project Co-ordinator at The Wiener Holocaust Library \nEvent guidelines \n1. The Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email before the event. Please do check your junk folders. \n2. Please try and join 5 minutes before the event start time and we will let you into the room (do try and bear with us if this takes a few minutes). If you have any technical difficulties\, please email Roxzann Baker (rbaker@wienerholocaustlibrary.org) and we’ll do our best to help sort them out.
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-primary-source-workshop-for-a-level-students-who-was-responsible-for-the-holocaust/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:Student Workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210525T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20210525T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T092905
CREATED:20210331T083749Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151310Z
UID:5271-1621969200-1621972800@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Book Talk: The Ravine
DESCRIPTION:A Holocaust and Genocide Research Partnership event\, part of The Wiener Holocaust Library’s Excavation-Confrontation-Repair? Family Histories of the Holocaust series.  \nThe terrible mass shootings in Poland and the Ukraine are often neglected in studies of the Holocaust because the perpetrators were meticulously careful to avoid leaving any evidence of their actions. Wendy Lower stumbled across one such piece of evidence – a photograph documenting the shooting of a mother and her children and the men who killed them – and from it has crafted The Ravine: A Family\, A Photograph\, A Holocaust Massacre Revealed\, a forensically brilliant and moving study that brings the larger horror of the genocide into focus. \nOne of the most compelling themes to emerge from her investigations in Ukraine\, Slovakia\, Germany and the USA is the identity and the surprising role of the photographer who recorded the killings. He must\, Lower assumed\, have been part of the Nazi organization of genocide. The truth was different… \nAbout the speakers \nProfessor Wendy Lower is the John K. Roth Professor of History and Director of the Mgrublian Center for Human Rights at Claremont McKenna College. She chairs the Academic Committee of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Her research and teaching focus on the history of genocide\, the Holocaust and human rights. Lower is the author of Hitler’s Furies: German Women in the Nazi Killing Fields (Houghton\, 2013) which was a finalist for the National Book Award\, and has been translated into 23 languages. \nDr Christine Schmidt is Deputy Director and Head of Research at The Wiener Holocaust Library\, London\, where she oversees academic outreach and programming. She earned her doctorate in history from Clark University in 2003. Her research has focused on the history of the International Tracing Service and early tracing efforts in Britain\, postwar research and collection initiatives\, the concentration camp system in Nazi Germany and comparative studies of collaboration and resistance in France and Hungary. \nPlease note: This event will take place on Zoom and the relevant details will be sent via email on the morning of the event.
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-book-talk-the-ravine/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:Excavation-Confrontation-Repair? Family Histories of the Holocaust,New and Noteworthy Books
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