Latest News

Monday, November 28th, 2022

EHRI invites applications for its Conny Kristel Fellowship Programme for 2023. The next cut-off dates for applying for the EHRI Conny Kristel Fellowships are 20 January 2023 and 30 June 2023.

By facilitating international access to an unprecedented range of key archives and collections related to the Holocaust as well as access to archival and digital humanities expertise, the EHRI Conny Kristel Fellowships support and stimulate Holocaust research conducted by researchers, archivists, librarians, curators, and junior scholars, especially PhD candidates with limited resources. Projects funded concern the Holocaust broadly conceived, including its prehistory, its aftermath, and the role of antisemitism before, during and after World War II.

EHRI is offering Kristel Fellowships at 19 of its partner institutions, located in 13 countries in Europe and Israel and the US.

Read more and How to apply

Thursday, November 24th, 2022

Online Event | 7 December 2022 | EHRI and the Holocaust Memorial Center in Budapest, Hungary

You are invited to follow online the conference Reflections on Images of the Holocaust in Central and Eastern Europe on Zoom or Facebook.

Photographs have an immediate emotional impact and can be seen as windows into past realities. They are important historical sources and priceless possessions of those who lost their families and other loved ones. Yet they are also all too often only seen as illustrations, as somehow less significant than textual and other materials.

In co-operation with the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure, the Holocaust Memorial Center in Budapest is organizing a conference to reflect on the significance of photographs of the Holocaust in Central and Eastern Europe.

Thursday, November 24th, 2022

Release date: 24 November 2022 More about the Podcast Series For the Living and the Dead. Traces of the Holocaust

In this episode, we talk about a photograph on the cover of a French magazine from 1938, showing two destitute looking women, stuck in so called No-Man’s Land. At the end of the 1930s, the emergence of “No Man’s Lands” symbolized the desperate situation of Jewish refugees who were expelled from countries throughout  East and Central Europe. Photos, testimonies and other source material that give a voice to survivors who stayed in these No Man’s Lands are scarce. However, Gerard Friedenfeld, who in 1938 found himself trapped in one of the No-Man’s Lands as a 14 year old boy, has given a harrowing account of his experiences and we can listen to his testimony.

Host Katharina Freise is joined by Michal Frankl, Senior Researcher at the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences, who investigates No-Man’s Lands and the fate  of the refugees who ended up in these desolate places.

Tuesday, November 22nd, 2022

Wednesday 7 December 3:00 - 4:30 PM CET | Zoom

The fourth EHRI webinar of this year will feature Aneta Plzáková and Daniela Bartáková, both from the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague. They are actively involved in the making of the web application "MemoGIS Prague". 

"MemoGIS Prague" describes the fates of the Holocaust victims from Prague. It interprets and analyses the data gathered in the Holocaust Victims Database managed by the Terezín Initiative Institute, which contains, among other things, digitized copies of selected documents from the Prague Police Directorate's fund. By connecting historical information with the map of Prague, this application helps users to study the segregation and persecution of Jewish inhabitants through space.

Tuesday, November 15th, 2022

On November 2-4, 2022, the EHRI Seminar: "A Multilevel Approach to the Holocaust in Romania", organized by the "Elie Wiesel" National Institute for the Study of the Holocaust in Romania and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, took place in Bucharest, Romania.

The 3-day seminar provided an overview of methods, sources, new research topics, and approaches to the Holocaust in Romania. The schedule included speakers from Israel, Romania, the USA, and England.

Monday, November 14th, 2022

10-11 May 2023, Wiener Holocaust Library, London, UK | Deadline for submission: 31 January 2023

This two-day, in-person symposium organised by The Wiener Holocaust Library and the University of Cambridge, taking place at the Library on the 10th-11th May 2023, will bring together early career researchers with senior academics to discuss new directions in the study of the Roma genocide.

In recent years, scholars have turned their attention to the experiences of persecuted Romani individuals and families, producing research that seeks to restore the agency and the voices of Roma victims of genocide, and contest narratives of anonymous mass victimhood. This has included increased research on resistance, memory, and memorialisation, as well as an interest in the post war legacy of the Roma genocide and its links to the persistent discrimination against Roma and Sinti communities.

Thursday, November 10th, 2022

Release date: 10 November 2022 More about the Podcast Series For the Living and the Dead. Traces of the Holocaust

In this episode we are presenting a story from Belgium, that of Norbert Vos, his family and his teddy bear. Norbert Vos was still a baby when on 10 May 1940 Germany invaded and occupied Belgium. The family was Jewish and the danger to them was imminent. After an attempt to flee, Norbert’s mother, Lea, found herself alone with her baby boy; her parents and husband were already deported. To save her life and that of Norbert, Lea knew she had to go into hiding and she desperately tried to find a place. After several disastrous attempts, she and Norbert, almost by chance, finally found a relatively safe haven with a café-owner and his wife and daughter. It was with this family that they managed to survive the war, and that Norbert received a present from the little girl of the family: a teddy bear, a gift that he and the girl would hold on to for the rest of their lives until they donated it to Kazerne Dossin.

Tuesday, November 8th, 2022

November 10, 6:30 PM (Kyiv Time) 

EHRI partner the Center for Urban History of East Central Europe  in Ukraine invites you to the online-presentation "German Historians and Russia's War against Ukraine - The significance of this debate for collaboration in the field of digital humanities" with Peter Haslinger, who is Director of the Herder Institute Marburg and Professor of History of Eastern Europe at the Giessen Center for Eastern European Studies.

The event is part of the programme series "Source as a choice" on documenting the experience of violence and warfare, organized by the Center for Urban History in cooperation with EHRI.

Thursday, November 3rd, 2022

Applications are due on December 31, 2022.

USC Shoah Foundation invites applications from advanced-level PhD candidates for the 2023-2024 USC Shoah Foundation Robert J. Katz Research Fellowship in Antisemitism Studies.

Thursday, November 3rd, 2022

Deadline for submission: January 23, 2023

The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) Archives is pleased to announce that it is accepting applications for its 2023 fellowship program. In 2023, three to six fellowships will be awarded to senior scholars, postdoctoral researchers, graduate students, and independent researchers to conduct research in the JDC Archives, either in New York or in Jerusalem.  The archives' finding aids can be consulted to identify relevant areas. The fellowship awards are $2,500 and the deadline for submission is January 23, 2023.