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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:20230326T010000
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DTSTART:20231029T010000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20230404T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20230404T203000
DTSTAMP:20241023T080846
CREATED:20230321T164817Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151237Z
UID:12704-1680633000-1680640200@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Hybrid Book Talk: Everyday Hate; How Antisemitism is Built into our World and How You Can Change It\, by Dave Rich
DESCRIPTION:The London Centre for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and the Wiener Holocaust Library invite you to a celebration of Dave Rich’s newly published book\, Everyday Hate; How Antisemitism is Built Into Our World and How You Can Change It. \nThere will be a conversation between David Hirsh of the LCSCA and Goldsmiths College\, and Dave Rich. \nDr Dave Rich is one of the UK’s leading experts on antisemitism. He has worked for almost thirty years for the Community Security Trust\, a Jewish charity that protects the UK Jewish community\, and advises the police\, the Crown Prosecution Service\, football clubs\, political parties and many others about how to tackle antisemitism. Dave is a research fellow at the London Centre for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism and is on the editorial board of the Journal of Contemporary Antisemitism. \nHe writes about antisemitism and extremism for a range of national and international media including the New Statesman\, Guardian\, New York Times and Jewish Chronicle and regularly appears on TV and radio including for BBC News\, Sky News and ITV News. This is Dave’s second book\, following The Left’s Jewish Problem: Jeremy Corbyn\, Israel and Antisemitism. \nTo attend in-person\, email centre@londonantisemitism.com to register your place. To attne donline\, please sign up via the Eventbrite link below.\nEvent guidelines for those joining online: \n\nThe Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email prior to the event. Please check your junk email folders\nPlease 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)\nIf 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\nThe event will be recorded for the Library’s YouTube channel and will be shared at a later date.
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/book-talk-everyday-hate-how-antisemitism-is-built-into-our-world-and-how-you-can-change-it-with-dave-rich/
LOCATION:The Wiener Holocaust Library\, The Wiener Holocaust Library\, London\, WC1B 5DP\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Antisemitism,New and Noteworthy Books
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/71FetT4krhL.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20230417T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20230417T170000
DTSTAMP:20241023T080846
CREATED:20230220T103619Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151237Z
UID:12284-1681747200-1681750800@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Student and Teacher Talk: Marking the 80th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
DESCRIPTION:Taken from the Stroop Report\, the photograph shows German troops sweeping through the Warsaw ghetto\, May 1943. \nWednesday 19th April 2023 marks the 80th anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising\, one of the largest forms of Jewish resistance to take place during the Holocaust. \nJews within the Warsaw Ghetto\, many armed with handmade weapons\, resisted the SS-led force as they entered the ghetto to deport its surviving inhabitants. In response\, the Nazis destroyed the ghetto\, building by building\, forcing Jews remaining in hiding to appear or be killed. 27 days after the initial April attack\, on 16 May 1943\, the uprising was crushed. While the uprising ultimately failed\, it was an extremely significant display of resistance from Jews in Warsaw. \nThis talk\, aimed at GCSE and A-Level students\, will utilise sources from the Library’s unique archive to gain an understanding of the different types of resistance during the Holocaust; to study original archival material to comprehend the events of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising; to consider why the event was so significant and to reflect on the event 80 years on. \nDelivered by Kiera Fitzgerald\, the Library’s Education Officer\, this session is suitable for those studying the following:\nKS3 History \n\nEdexcel GCSE History: Weimar and Nazi Germany 1918-1939\nOCR GCSE History: Germany 1925-1955\, The People and The State\nEdexcel A-Level History: Germany and West Germany\, 1918–89\nOCR History: Democracy and Dictatorships in Germany 1919–1963\nAQA History: Democracy and Nazism\, Germany 1918-1945
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/virtual-student-and-teacher-talk-marking-the-80th-anniversary-of-the-warsaw-ghetto-uprising/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:Education
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/GH-War_0045_WL2922-e1676653238893.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Wiener Holocaust Library":MAILTO:info@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20230418T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20230418T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T080846
CREATED:20230321T140628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151237Z
UID:12691-1681842600-1681848000@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Hybrid Event: The Last Letter\, with Karen Baum Gordon
DESCRIPTION:This event is organised as part of the Holocaust Letters exhibition events series organised by the Holocaust and Genocide Research Partnership.  \nBorn a German Jew in 1915\, Rudy Baum was eighty-six years old when he sealed the garage door of his Dallas home\, turned on the car ignition\, and tried to end his life. After confronting her father’s attempted suicide\, Karen Baum Gordon\, Rudy’s daughter\, began a sincere effort to understand the sequence of events that led her father to that dreadful day in 2002. What she found were hidden scars of generational struggles reaching back to the camps and ghettos of the Third Reich.  \nIn The Last Letter: A Father’s Struggle\, a Daughter’s Quest\, and the Long Shadow of the Holocaust\, Gordon explores not only her father’s life story\, but also the stories and events that shaped the lives of her grandparents—two Holocaust victims that Rudy tried in vain to save in the late 1930s and early years of World War II. This investigation of her family’s history is grounded in eighty-eight letters written mostly by Julie Baum\, Rudy’s mother and Karen’s grandmother\, to Rudy between November 1936 and October 1941. In five parts\, Gordon examines pieces of these well-worn\, handwritten letters and other archival documents in order to discover what her family experienced during the Nazi period and the psychological impact that reverberated from it in the generations that followed.  \nPart of the Legacies of War series\, The Last Letter is a captivating family memoir that spans events from the 1930s and Hitler’s rise to power\, through World War II and the Holocaust\, to the present-day United States. In recreating the fatal journeys of her grandparents and tracing her father’s efforts to save them an ocean away in America\, Gordon discovers the forgotten fragments of her family’s history and a vivid sense of her own Jewish identity. By inviting readers along on this journey\, Gordon manages to honor victim and survivor alike and shows subsequent generations—now many years after the tragic events of World War II—what it means to remember.  \nAbout the Speaker:  \nA graduate of Harvard College and Columbia Business School\, Karen Baum Gordon co-founded Strategic Horizons\, Inc.\, an executive coaching and management consulting firm. Karen is a Dallas native and now lives with her husband and black lab in Brooklyn\, New York\, and South Hero\, Vermont. She is an active member of Brooklyn Heights Synagogue and recently served as president of the congregation.  \nEvent guidelines for those joining online:  \n\nThe Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email prior to the event. Please check your junk email folders. \n\n\nPlease 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). \n\n\nIf 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. \n\n\nThe event will be recorded for the Library’s YouTube channel and will be shared at a later date. 
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/hybrid-event-the-last-letter-with-karen-baum-gordon/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:Family Histories of the Holocaust,HGRP,Holocaust Letters
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/1.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Wiener Holocaust Library":MAILTO:info@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20230424T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20230424T130000
DTSTAMP:20241023T080846
CREATED:20230213T155123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151237Z
UID:12230-1682337600-1682341200@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Hybrid Lunchtime Exhibition Talk: A Letter from Danzig: Understanding Jewish Family Correspondence from the First World War\, Dr Joe Cronin
DESCRIPTION:Image courtesy of George Fogelson \nThis event is organised as part of the Holocaust Letters exhibition events series. \nLetters provide insight into their writers\, but how much can we learn about them from one letter? \nThis talk examines a Jewish nurse’s letter to her brother from the opening months of the First World War. The letter is replete with allusions to the unfolding military situation on the Eastern Front\, but it also offers a glimpse into her own journey of self-discovery – a newly trained nurse\, a woman who has realised that she ‘likes working’. \nThe talk will also focus on the challenges of reading correspondence written in archaic German in a near-indecipherable script. How much meaning can we truly recover from textual artefacts that were intended for somebody who knew their author far better than we do? \nSpeaker: \nJoseph Cronin is Lecturer in Modern German History at Queen Mary University of London. He specialises in modern German\, Jewish and East European history and is currently writing a book about Jews in the Free City of Danzig (1920–39). \nEvent guidelines for those joining online:\n\nThe Library will send you a Zoom link and joining instructions via email prior to the event. Please check your junk email folders.\nPlease 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).\nIf 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.\nThe event will be recorded for the Library’s YouTube channel and will be shared at a later date.\n\nThis event is free\, although registration via the link below is required. Please note that our free events are run by staff volunteers. Thank you for your patience should we have any technical or audio difficulties. We will do our best to correct them but this is not always possible.
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/lunchtime-exhibition-talk-a-letter-from-danzig-understanding-jewish-family-correspondence-from-the-first-world-war-dr-joe-cronin/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:HGRP,Holocaust Letters
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/joe-cronin.png
ORGANIZER;CN="The Wiener Holocaust Library":MAILTO:info@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20230426T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20230426T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T080846
CREATED:20230213T155434Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151237Z
UID:12235-1682533800-1682539200@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Exhibition Workshop: Found! Letters! with Deborah Jaffé
DESCRIPTION:This event is organised as part of the Holocaust Letters exhibition events series. \nWhen Deborah Jaffé was clearing her parents’ flat she found a pile of damp and mouldy letters and papers. The 200 letters were written in German by her father in Berlin and dated between 1937-39. Many were carbon copies of letters he had typed on the typewriter he had given her. There were replies too\, as well as telegrams\, birth certificates\, a passport\, school reports\, job references\, train tickets and numerous application forms for emigration.   Despite her almost non-existent German\, she realised they were important and a young man’s attempts to get out. This has now gone from being a pile of 200 letters to an archive with its own biography. \nIn this workshop Deborah will discuss the practicalities of conserving and archiving found letters and papers. She will look at how the material is handled including: conservation\, scanning\, translation\, storage\, cataloguing\, dealing with the content\, the intended readership\, communication\, typewriters and carbon copies\, handwriting\, and discoveries made. Ephemera like train tickets\, as well as envelopes\, letter headings\, telegrams and details in photographs are all relevant to the narrative in letters\, especially within the context of the political climate. \nUsing addresses on the letters and envelopes\, it has been possible to map the places where the family had lived around Germany. Deborah will describe how this enabled her to make installations using material in the archive that related to people\, in places where they had been born\, lived\, and worked. Using this archive and the resources of numerous organisations\, Deborah has been able to discover more about those she knew and the fates of other family members she had not been told about. This is very different to the story she had been told about the getting out.
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/exhibition-talk-found-letters-with-deborah-jaffe/
LOCATION:Isle of Man
CATEGORIES:HGRP,Holocaust Letters
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/jaffe.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="The Wiener Holocaust Library":MAILTO:info@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20230427T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20230427T200000
DTSTAMP:20241023T080846
CREATED:20230314T141230Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240916T151237Z
UID:12576-1682620200-1682625600@wienerholocaustlibrary.org
SUMMARY:Book event: A Dual Perspective: Sir Konrad Schiemann and Sir Bernard Rix in Conversation
DESCRIPTION:The Wiener Holocaust Library is pleased to host this conversation between one of our patrons\, The Rt Hon Sir Bernard Rix KC\, and The Rt Hon Sir Konrad Schiemann about Schiemann’s recently published memoir A Dual Perspective: the German in an English Judge \nSir Bernard\, whose father fled to England before the war was Sir Konrad’s contemporary in the High Court and the Court of Appeal and now practices as an arbitrator. \nSir Konrad\, born of German parents\, spent the war in Berlin being bombed by the British\, became an orphan\, and moved to England in 1946 and started\, in his words\, aping the manners of an English gentleman. After practicing at the bar\, he became a High Court Judge\, a Lord Justice in the Court of Appeal and finished his career as the British Judge of the European Court of Justice. After having his family and life in Germany torn apart by conflict he forged a career around his desire to help in the construction of a peaceful Europe. \nIt was only late in life that Konrad realised the extraordinary family into which he had been born including a great-great grandfather who presided over five parliaments and the first German Supreme Court and a great-grandfather who was a friend of the last Kaiser. \nPiercing together extensive correspondence in the 1930s and 40s A Dual Perspective is the moving memoir of a family which has been involved in the construction of Europe since the first half of the nineteenth century and was faced with all the challenges posed by the Third Reich. \nOne of his grandfathers who joined the Nazi Party wrote letters\, which are reproduced in the book\, in 1933 to Konrad’s father\, engaged to a lady of Jewish extraction who became Konrad’s mother\, explaining why he has joined the Nazi Party and urging his son to do the same. However\, Konrad’s father did not. That grandfather’s sister was an open opponent of the regime and has been recognised as one of the Righteous among the Gentiles. His mother worked with Count Berthold von Stauffenberg and describes the atmosphere among those who plotted to assassinate Hitler and expected to be executed when the plot to assassinate Hitler failed. Most\, including many family friends\, were. The book describes the tensions within the family which nonetheless remained united. \nThe book is a mixture of history\, family memoir\, philosophical and political reflections\, describes an English education and upbringing in the last century and ends with a summary of the evolution of Konrad’s thoughts on national sovereignty and the European Union. \nModerated by: Dr Toby Simpson\, Director of the Wiener Holocaust Library
URL:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/event/book-event-a-dual-perspective-sir-konrad-schiemann-and-sir-bernard-rix-in-conversation/
LOCATION:The Wiener Holocaust Library\, The Wiener Holocaust Library\, London\, WC1B 5DP\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:New and Noteworthy Books
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://wienerholocaustlibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/415opjg-y4L.jpg
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