Filtering by: Museum

Fighting Antisemitism and Hate Through Education: An HMTC Kickoff Event
Jan
18
6:00 PM18:00

Fighting Antisemitism and Hate Through Education: An HMTC Kickoff Event

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

You’re invited to partner with HMTC as we continue to lead the fight against antisemitism and hate here Long Island and throughout New York.

We need you now. And we need you for the future – for HMTC to continue, enhance, and expand its critical education programs for students of all backgrounds.

At this kick-off event, you’ll experience HMTC’s vital work, including new artificial intelligence technology that keeps Holocaust survivor stories alive. Tour our exhibits, meet our community, and see how together, we can build a future we’re proud of. 

REGISTER HERE

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The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club discussion of “The Song of the Jade Lily,” by Kirsty Manning
Dec
14
1:00 PM13:00

The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club discussion of “The Song of the Jade Lily,” by Kirsty Manning

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

When the Bernfeld family’s comfortable life in Vienna is shattered by the Nazis on Kristallnacht, 13-year-old Romy and her parents flee to Shanghai, an open port and one of the few places that would accept Jews in 1938. There they struggle to rebuild their lives, sharing their sense of danger within the community of German-Jewish refugees as the war rages around them, all the while searching for safety and acceptance amid the local Chinese population and striving to create their new future in this strange land.

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The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club discussion of “The Flight Portfolio,” by Julie Orringer
Nov
16
1:00 PM13:00

The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club discussion of “The Flight Portfolio,” by Julie Orringer

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Please join us on Zoom for this discussion of Julie Orringer’s “The Flight Portfolio,” at our monthly book club, hosted by HMTC’s Louis Posner Memorial Library.

Varian Fry, an affluent Protestant New Yorker, drawn to Europe’s art, music and literary heritage, finds nothing but barbarism in France in 1940. He heads to Marseille as a volunteer in a privately organized mission, the Emergency Rescue Committee, whose mandate, encouraged by Eleanor Roosevelt, is to facilitate escape for luminaries in the arts, virtually all of them Jews. His experiences there, told in fictional form, fairly bristle with peril, subterfuge, forgery and unrelenting hostility. But in the end he saves the lives of more than 2,000 desperate souls.

For additional information, please contact Dr. Linda Burghardt, scholar-in-residence and discussion leader, at lindaburghardt@hmtcli.org or 516.571.8040.


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Sunday with Survivors: Steve Israeler - Virtual Event
Nov
13
6:00 PM18:00

Sunday with Survivors: Steve Israeler - Virtual Event

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Join us for the next program in this series of presentations by Holocaust Survivors. In this program, we will be joined by 91-year-old Holocaust survivor Steve Israeler. Born in Krakow, Poland, in 1931, Steve was only 8-years-old when the war started. Steve shares testimony of his family's forced move from Krakow to Tarnów, surviving the ghetto and numerous concentration camps against all odds, and making his way to Canada as an orphan after the war.

There is no cost to participate in this event, however, donations are very much appreciated.

For more information contact HMTC at (516) 571-8040 or info@hmtcli.org.

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Three-Day Teacher Training - Young Voices of the Holocaust: Exploring the Holocaust Through The Writing of Teenage Diarists
Jun
28
to Jun 30

Three-Day Teacher Training - Young Voices of the Holocaust: Exploring the Holocaust Through The Writing of Teenage Diarists

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

HMTC’s new professional development center is named in honor of Holocaust Survivor and educator Irving Roth

HMTC is opening the Irving Roth Professional Development Center with a three-day teacher training in June 2022, entitled “Young Voices of the Holocaust,” that will draw on the book Salvaged Pages: Young Writers' Diaries of the Holocaust (which will be provided to all participants) and include a presentation by author Alexandra Zapruder.

This teacher training is designed for teachers who teach the Holocaust or who are interested in working on this topic with their students. Workshops and activities will focus on giving teachers lesson plans and concrete resources they can use in the classroom. The three-day training offers 12 hours of New York State CTLE credits and will include breakfast and lunch each day.

Applications Accepted on Rolling Admission Basis

 
 

HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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2G Tuesday: Dinah Kramer (on Zoom)
May
24
6:00 PM18:00

2G Tuesday: Dinah Kramer (on Zoom)

  • Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this program, the next in our series of presentations by the children of Holocaust Survivors (2Gs), Dinah Kramer presented the testimony of her mother Sara Gole, originally from Kielce, Poland, who survived several forced labor camps and a death march to Buchenwald, where she was liberated by American troops on April 26, 1945.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Leon Uris’s Mila 18 (on Zoom)
May
18
1:00 PM13:00

The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Leon Uris’s Mila 18 (on Zoom)

  • Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this meeting of our monthly book club, hosted by HMTC’s Louis Posner Memorial Library, we will be discussing Mila 18, by Leon Uris, a novel about the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1943.


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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 Yom HaShoah Program with Father Patrick Desbois (on Zoom)
May
1
7:00 PM19:00

Yom HaShoah Program with Father Patrick Desbois (on Zoom)

HMTC joins with a Congregation Shaaray Shalom, the American Jewish Committee and a number of regional partners to present a Yom HaShoah program with Father Patrick Desbois, the forensic detective and world-renowned human-rights activist who has been documenting the war crimes of the Einsatzgruppen and other more recent genocides.


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Hymns from Auschwitz: A Tribute to Viktor Ullman and Michel Assael -- An Event Honoring Martin Elias
Apr
20
8:00 PM20:00

Hymns from Auschwitz: A Tribute to Viktor Ullman and Michel Assael -- An Event Honoring Martin Elias

  • Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County presents

New Manhattan Sinfonietta

Hymns from Auschwitz: A Tribute to Viktor Ullman and Michel Assael

In honor of Yom HaShoah, join us for a never-before-seen musical performance in memory of two Holocaust victims; one who survived; and one who was murdered.

New Manhattan Sinfonietta brings together soulful premieres. This meaningful concert includes “Hymns from Auschwitz” featuring hazans and a piano orchestral piece by Elcil Gürel Göçtü, a young student composer who worked with Renan Koen on her March of the Music initiative. The concert also includes Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor, K. 491 by W.A. Mozart, which Renan Koen will perform in memoriam of Viktor Ullmann. The performance will conclude with the debut of the Auschwitz Symphonic Poem written by Holocaust survivor Michel Assael. This poem was locked away and ultimately found by Dr. Joe Halio through his passionate research, and Renan Koen assisted in bringing this masterpiece to life.

ELCİL GÜREL GÖÇTÜ (1979-)  Hymns from Auschwitz 

featuring Hazan Rabbi Nesim Elnecavé and Ilker Nahmias 

    ~World Premiére~

W.A.MOZART (1756-1791)            Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor, K. 491

MICHEL ASSAEL (1918-2006)   Auschwitz Symphonic Poém

“In memoriam of five million hostages slaughtered in the concentration camps, innocent victims of the most unhuman and barbaric frenzy”

       ~World Premiére~

This moving musical score was written by Michel Assael, a Jewish musician and composer from Salonika, Greece. After surviving Auschwitz, Assael wrote this piece in memory of all that was lost. The piece was written in 1947, but has never been performed. It has recently been rediscovered and will be given its debut performance at this not-to-be missed concert.

This event is also in memory of Viktor Ullman, a Silesian-born Austrian and renowned composer, and conductor who was sent to Terezin where he organized concerts and performed during the war. Ullman was ultimately deported to Auschwitz and was killed in the gas chambers.

 
 

We’re proud to honor Martin Elias, a steadfast supporter of Holocaust and tolerance education. We thank Martin for his generosity and support in making this concert a reality.


Sponsorship Packages

Legacy - $50,000
Includes 16 tickets in prime locations, corporate host for a VIP reception and invites for 16 guests to the VIP reception, prominent listing on HMTC website, prominent listing in HMTC event-related emails and social media promoting this event, prominent listing in the playbill.

Upstander - $25,000
Includes 10 tickets in prime locations, an invitation for 10 to VIP reception, prominent listing on HMTC website, prominent listing in HMTC emails and social media promoting this event, prominent listing in the playbill.

Tolerance - $20,000
Includes 8 tickets in prime locations, 8 invitations to the VIP reception, listing on HMTC website, listing in HMTC emails and social media promoting this event, listing in the playbill.

Resistance - $10,000
Includes 6 tickets in prime locations, 6 invitations to the VIP reception, listing on HMTC website, listing in the playbill.

Understanding - $5,000
Includes 4 tickets in prime locations, 4 invitations to the VIP reception, listing on HMTC website, listing in the playbill.

Remembrance - $2,500
Includes 2 tickets in prime locations, 2 invitations to the VIP reception, listing on HMTC website, listing in the playbill.

Digital Journal Ads
For all gifts of $500 or more, you’re invited to place an ad in HMTC’s Hymns from Auschwitz event journal. Once you make your gift, we’ll be in touch with you about your ad. If you get a sponsorship package, we’ll also be in touch with you to go over your VIP seating arrangement options.


Individual Tickets 
Tickets to this event range from $27 to $180. per ticket. 

For more information about sponsorship packages, tickets, or the event, contact Gayle Peck at gaylepeck@holocaust-nassau.org.

carnegiehall.org | CarnegieCharge 212-247-7800 | Box Office at 57th and Seventh Avenue

Please direct all donations related to this event to the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County.


About Viktor Ullman

Viktor Ullman was a renowned composer and conductor, trapped in Prague when the Nazis invaded. He was deported to Terezin where he organized concerts and performed. Ironically, he wrote prolifically while interned, pieces we enjoy today. Sadly, he was murdered in Auschwitz. 

“It must be emphasized that Theresienstadt has served to enhance, not impede, my musical activities, that by no means did we sit weeping on the banks of the waters of Babylon, and that our endeavor with respect to Arts was commensurate with our will to live. And I am convinced that all those who, in life and art, were fighting to force form upon the resisting matter, will agree with me.” -- V. Ullman 

About Michel Assael
Michel Assael was born in Salonika, Greece, and was deported to Auschwitz in 1943. Surviving selections, he became a member of the orchestra along with his sisters, Lily and Yvette. Dr. Albert Menache, a physician, heard the orchestra needed an accordion player and recommended Michel. In turn, Lily helped Dr. Menache’s daughter get into the orchestra, sadly she did not survive. Upon liberation, Dr. Menache wrote a detailed account of the Greek experience. Michel, inspired by Dr. Menache’s account, wrote a score in memory of all that was lost. The score sat in a box since 1946, never transcribed or performed. After the war, many survivors emigrated to New York, Michel and Albert among them. 

About Renan Koen

Pianist, Composer, Soprano, Music Therapist, Columnist

Koen started her studies in music with the flute in 1979, when the conductor of the Amherst College Choir discovered her talent during his stay in İstanbul for the International Music Festival. She started studying piano in 1983 with the composer Ali Darmar, and the “State Artist” Ayşegül Sarıca. Meanwhile, she received her secondary school degree from the flute studio of “Nazım Acar” at Mimar Sinan University State Conservatory. Between 1985 and 1986, she furthered her studies in piano in Paris with Germaine Mounier. In 1990-1991 she continued her studies in London with the pedagogue Maria Curcio and her assistant Mark Swartzentruber.

Read the rest of Renan’s bio and learn more about her incredible work here.

About Gurer Aykal –

Artistic Director / Conductor

New Manhattan Sinfonietta Orchestra

Gürer Aykal, the honorary conductor of the New Manhattan Sinfonietta Orchestra, started his music education at the Ankara State Conservatoire. Studying violin with Necdet Remzi Atak and composition with Adnan Saygun. Between 1969 and 1971, he continued his education at the Guildhall School of Music and the Royal Academy of Music where he had the opportunity to work with prominent conductors such as George Hurst and Sir André Previn. Subsequently, he studied for two years in Italy where he served as assistant to Franco Ferrara in the Academia of Santa Cecilia in Rome. He was designated with the “Diploma di Merito” for conducting by the Accademia Musicale Chigiana. Meanwhile, he studied Gregorian music and Renaissance polyphony with Prof. Bertolucci in Musica di Sacra in the Vatican.

Read the rest of Gurer’s bio and learn more about his accomplishments here.


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Concert for Peace
Mar
27
3:30 PM15:30

Concert for Peace

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Concert for Peace

IN SUPPORT OF THE UKRAINIAN WAR RELIEF EFFORTS 

Together with music, we can help

Thanks for your donation. Note that this is not a reservation. To reserve your seats for the concert, please contact concertforpeace2022@gmail.com. Due to limited seating reservations are required.

All donations through this page will go to the United Ukrainian American Relief Committee. Thank you for your help.


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The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Meg Waite Clayton’s Last Train to London
Mar
16
1:00 PM13:00

The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Meg Waite Clayton’s Last Train to London

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this meeting of our monthly book club, hosted by HMTC’s Louis Posner Memorial Library, we will be discussing The Last Train to London, by Meg Waite Clayton, a novel based on the true story of the Kindertransport rescue of ten thousand Jewish children from Nazi-occupied Europe and one brave woman who made the escape possible.

For the upcoming 2021-22 book selections schedule, click here


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Screening and Discussion of “The Codebreaker,” with Commentary by Melissa Davis, Library and Archives Director, George C. Marshall Foundation.
Mar
15
7:00 PM19:00

Screening and Discussion of “The Codebreaker,” with Commentary by Melissa Davis, Library and Archives Director, George C. Marshall Foundation.

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

HMTC and the David Taub Reel Upstander Film Series presented a screening of The Codebreaker in honor of women’s history month. The film reveals the fascinating story of Elizebeth Smith Friedman, the groundbreaking cryptanalyst whose painstaking work to decode thousands of messages for the U.S. government sent infamous gangsters to prison in the 1930s and brought down a massive, near-invisible Nazi spy ring in WWII. Commentary was provided by Melissa Davis, the Library and Archives Director at the George C. Marshall Foundation, which holds the papers of Elizebeth Smith Friedman.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Curator’s Corner: A Photograph of the German “Anschluss” of Austria in March 1938
Mar
9
11:00 AM11:00

Curator’s Corner: A Photograph of the German “Anschluss” of Austria in March 1938

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Curator’s Corner

Thorin Tritter, HMTC’s museum and programming director, talked about a photograph displayed in our gallery that shows a crowd waving Nazi flags in support of the German annexation of Austria on March 12, 1938, 84 years ago this week. Dr. Tritter described why the Nazis annexed Austria and the dramatic impact on the Jewish population.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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 2G Tuesday: Meryl Menashe
Mar
8
6:00 PM18:00

2G Tuesday: Meryl Menashe

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this program, the next in our series of presentations by the children of Holocaust Survivors (2Gs), Meryl Menashe presented the story of her father-in-law Nissim Menashe and two other family members, all of whom grew up in the thriving Jewish community of Salonica, Greece before the war. Out of 58 known family members from Greece who experienced the Nazi invasion, they are the only three that survived. Meryl also shared a family connection to Michel Assael, whose “Auschwitz Symphonic Poem” will debut at a Carnegie Hall performance on April 20.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Curator’s Corner: A Wedding Dress from Pre-War Europe
Mar
2
11:00 AM11:00

Curator’s Corner: A Wedding Dress from Pre-War Europe

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Curator’s Corner

Join Thorin Tritter, HMTC’s Museum and Programming Director, for a discussion about a wedding dress that was used in a wedding in Amsterdam in 1940, just before the Nazis invaded on May 10th, and then carried from the Netherlands across the Atlantic to New York. The dress offers a window into the pre-war life of Jews in Amsterdam and the terror brought on by the Nazi attack.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Curator’s Corner: African American Liberators
Feb
23
11:00 AM11:00

Curator’s Corner: African American Liberators

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Curator’s Corner

In honor of Black History Month, Dr. Thorin Tritter, HMTC’s Museum and Programming Director, talked about the several images in HMTC’s galleries that show African American soldiers. These photographs capture some of the 1.5 million African Americans who served during WWII, fighting the Nazis and their racial ideology, even while Jim Crow laws and segregation remained in force back home in the United States. Dr. Tritter discussed the Double V campaign and the fight for freedom overseas and at home.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Simon Wiesenthal’s The Sunflower
Feb
16
1:00 PM13:00

The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Simon Wiesenthal’s The Sunflower

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this meeting of our monthly book club, hosted by HMTC’s Louis Posner Memorial Library, we will be discussing Simon Wiesenthal’s The Sunflower, which tells the story of a member of the SS who seeks forgiveness on his death bed from a concentration camp prisoner and the struggle the prisoner faces between compassion and justice, silence and truth.

For the upcoming 2021-22 book selections schedule, click here


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Sunday with Survivors: Renée Silver
Feb
13
1:00 PM13:00

Sunday with Survivors: Renée Silver

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Watch the next program in this series of presentations by Holocaust Survivors. In this program, Survivor Renee Silver shared the information about her family’s departure from the Saarland after its 1935 reunification with Germany, their arrest as enemy aliens and detention in the Gurs internment camp, her placement into hiding in Le Chambon-Sur-Lignon, and the family’s later reunification and flight over the Swiss border to safety.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Curator’s Corner: Martin Luther King, Jr.
Feb
2
11:00 AM11:00

Curator’s Corner: Martin Luther King, Jr.

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Curator’s Corner

In the first of several programs held in recognition of Black History Month, HMTC’s Museum and Programming Director, Thorin Tritter, discussed an iconic photograph of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. that stands in our final gallery. Dr. Tritter talked about the way Dr. King highlighted the history of the Holocaust during the Civil Rights Movement.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Sunday with Survivors: Rosalie Simon
Jan
23
6:00 PM18:00

Sunday with Survivors: Rosalie Simon

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Join us for the next program in this series of presentations by Holocaust Survivors. In this program, Survivor Rosalie Simon shared information about her life in Teresva, Czechoslovakia (now Ukraine) before the war, her deportation to Auschwitz, and her various escapes from death due to her perseverance, the help of her sisters, and the kindness of strangers.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Nazis on Long Island: The Story of Camp Siegfried (Co-sponsored with the Museum of Jewish Heritage and New York City College of Technology)
Jan
20
2:00 PM14:00

Nazis on Long Island: The Story of Camp Siegfried (Co-sponsored with the Museum of Jewish Heritage and New York City College of Technology)

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

HMTC co-sponsored a program held by the Museum of Jewish Heritage about the German American Bund’s Camp Siegfried, which operated in Yaphank in the 1930s. The program featured a panel discussion between Bess Wohl, playwright of Camp Siegfried; Bradley W. Hart, author of Hitler’s American Friends: The Third Reich’s Supporters in the United States; and Arnie Bernstein, author of Swastika Nation: Fritz Kuhn & the Rise and Fall of the German-American Bund. The conversation was moderated by Randi F. Marshall, Editorial Writer at Newsday.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Ronald Balson’s Eli’s Promise
Jan
19
1:00 PM13:00

The HMTC Louis Posner Memorial Library Book Club Discussion of Ronald Balson’s Eli’s Promise

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this meeting of our monthly book club, hosted by HMTC’s Louis Posner Memorial Library, we will be discussing Ronald Balson’s Eli’s Promise, which tells the story of a Jewish man from Lublin whose wife disappears during the Nazi occupation and his desperate search -- through war-torn Poland, in displaced persons camps in Germany, and into modern-day Chicago -- for both her and the man who swore to keep her safe. Please read the book, a limited number of copies of which are available at HMTC, and join us for this virtual discussion.

For the upcoming 2021-22 book selections schedule, click here


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Curator’s Corner: Photographs from the Liberation of Auschwitz
Jan
12
11:00 AM11:00

Curator’s Corner: Photographs from the Liberation of Auschwitz

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Curator’s Corner

As we approach International Holocaust Remembrance Day, later in January, HMTC’s museum and programming director, Dr. Thorin Tritter, talked about two photographs in our galleries taken at Auschwitz shortly after liberation by the Red Army on January 27, 1945. He discussed the images and the events that led to the liberation of the Nazi’s most notorious camp.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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2G Tuesday: Debbie Cohn
Jan
11
6:00 PM18:00

2G Tuesday: Debbie Cohn

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this program, the second in our series of presentations by the children of Holocaust Survivors (2Gs), Debbie Cohn presents the story of her mother, Ilse Loeb (neé Morgenstern). Ilse grew up in Vienna, but in the wake of “Kristallnacht,” at the age of 13, her parents sent her to the Netherlands for safety. Ilse was later forced into hiding, moving to various locations to keep ahead of the Nazis. While she survived the war, she never saw her parents again.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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A Haven from the Holocaust: Washington Heights and the Jews of Europe, Presented by Dr. Linda Burghardt
Jan
6
11:00 AM11:00

A Haven from the Holocaust: Washington Heights and the Jews of Europe, Presented by Dr. Linda Burghardt

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Throughout the Holocaust, thousands of refugees from Nazi-occupied Europe sought healing and hope in Manhattan's neighborhood of Washington Heights, making it home to the world's largest German-Jewish community in the aftermath of the war. What did Washington Heights offer and how did this iconic community help these refugees become Americans? We hosted a presentation about this unique neighborhood, one that offered German and Austrian Jews, and other Survivors who followed later, the strength and resilience to overcome their inestimable loss.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Curator’s Corner: A “Ghost Army” Flag of Liberation
Jan
5
11:00 AM11:00

Curator’s Corner: A “Ghost Army” Flag of Liberation

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Curator’s Corner

Thorin Tritter, the Museum and Programming Director, discussed a Nazi flag that was pulled down by Harold Fisch, an American soldier serving in the “Ghost Army” during WWII, who then covered the flag with the signatures of other soldiers in his unit, transforming it from a flag of hate to a flag of liberation.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Curator’s Corner: Remembering the Eichmann Trial 60 Years Later
Dec
15
11:00 AM11:00

Curator’s Corner: Remembering the Eichmann Trial 60 Years Later

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Curator’s Corner

HMTC’s Museum and Programming Director, Dr. Thorin Tritter, discussed the trial of Adolf Eichmann, who was sentenced to death on December 15, 1961, 60 years ago today, after a lengthy trial held in Jerusalem and broadcast on television for the world to watch.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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Sunday with Survivors: Eva Kessner
Dec
12
6:00 PM18:00

Sunday with Survivors: Eva Kessner

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

In this series of presentations by Holocaust Survivors, Survivor Eva Kessner shared information about her Viennese family’s survival in Nazi-occupied France and their harrowing escape to Switzerland in 1942 at the height of “The Final Solution.”

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

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The Universalization and Contemporary Abuse of Holocaust History, Presented by Dr. Elana Heideman, The Israel Forever Foundation
Dec
9
12:00 PM12:00

The Universalization and Contemporary Abuse of Holocaust History, Presented by Dr. Elana Heideman, The Israel Forever Foundation

  • Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The lessons of the Holocaust have become public property, with an emphasis on universalization that often results in the erasing of the Jew. The memory has begun to fade, diminished under the passage of time as well as the weight of Holocaust distortions, inappropriate comparisons, Holocaust “fatigue,” and, most recently, the return of traditional anti-Jewish tropes that disregard the significance of the Holocaust. Dr. Elana Heideman, Executive Director of The Israel Forever Foundation, joined us for a talk that explored the misappropriation of Holocaust history and imagery and discussed what we can do to change the current trends.

If you missed this program, you can watch it now on Youtube:


HMTC needs your help now more than ever. Your donation will support HMTC’s virtual programming for students and adults. Help us continue to be able to provide Holocaust and Tolerance Education programs to schools and public programs for the community.

View Event →