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Studying the Holocaust with Yad Vashem

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יד ושם | Yad Vashem

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Our Courses

EARL BALES MEMORIAL PROJECT

נועם גיטין היילי דילמן Noa Mkayton Yoni Berrous ליסה ביטון
Start date
30.01.23
English ‎(en)‎

FLASHES OF MEMORY: Learning about the Holocaust through Photography

אסף טל לילך אורפלי
Start date
08.05.26
English ‎(en)‎

Museum tours

Alan Brussel יעל ריצ'לר
Start date
14.11.23
English ‎(en)‎

Seminar for Teachers from Canada - July 2023

Yoni Berrous
Start date
01.06.23
English ‎(en)‎

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Skip On the Holocaust - a Yad Vashem Podcast

On the Holocaust - a Yad Vashem Podcast

On the Holocaust - a Yad Vashem Podcast

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Women in Auschwitz

The Auschwitz concentration camp was one of the most horrific places ever conceived of by man--a place of constant torture. The experience was uniquely terrible for women, who were forced into some of the most unimaginable of circumstances. Even years later, the mothers who survived couldn't escape the memory.

Emanuel Ringelbum and The Warsaw Ghetto secret Archive

In November 1940, the Nazis confined nearly 400,000 Jews to the Warsaw Ghetto and sealed it off. A group of Jews began documenting life there—recording suffering, resilience, and fleeting moments of normalcy—in what became the Oneg Shabbat archive, our main source on the Ghetto’s history.

The Vilna Ghetto “Paper Brigade"

Shmerke Kaczerginski was a boisterous, radical young writer and musician who led an exciting circle of young artists who called themselves "Young Vilna." His best friend, Abraham Sutzkever, would go on to become one of the greatest Yiddish poets of his generation. As the two entered adulthood, their artistic careers were interrupted with the Nazi invasion of their hometown of Vilna. 

Crossing the Boundary - The Righteous Among the Nations

In a morally bankrupt world, at a time when the attitude of the majority of the local population towards Jews was tainted by apathy or outright hostility, there was also a small minority of people who mustered extraordinary courage to uphold their moral values. People who were willing to leave their place among the bystanders and in many ways share the fates of the Jewish victims.

Virtual tour for learning about, and teaching, the Holocaust 


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