The Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies (VWI) invites applications for its fellowships for the academic year 2012/2013, beginning October 1, 2012. The VWI is a partner of EHRI.
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Thursday, March 8, 2012
5:00 PM | Davidson Conference Center, Vineyard Room, USC Campus | Reception to follow
Last January over sixty people working for EHRI gathered in Israel for a series of meetings to discuss our initial results. EHRI partner Yad Vashem organized the event, and was host to the 19 partner organisations involved.
Scottish Holocaust Project
Gathering the Voices is a good example of the many projects, big and small, and in various countries, that still contribute to our knowledge of the Holocaust and its impact. In the end EHRI hopes to connect all this material and to create the best environment for Holocaust research.
An International Workshop on Holocaust Testimonies of the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure (EHRI) at the Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide
Monday 30th April - Wednesday 2nd May 2012
EHRI would like to invite you to an international workshop to be held at EHRI partner The Wiener Library on Holocaust Testimonies.
Leader of Work Package 5: Training
The EHRI project had only just started when I moved from Berlin to Munich, so the launch in Brussels was my first official trip after I began working at the Institute of Contemporary History (IfZ).
The European Holocaust Research Infrastructure has published its first issue of the e-Newsletter for Experts in Holocaust Documentation. The aim of this annual online newsletter is to share and disseminate knowledge and new insights, and to organize a continuous exchange of knowledge and views between experts in methodological fields of Holocaust research.
EHRI partner, the Institut für Zeitgeschichte (IfZ) of Munich/Berlin (picture), Germany, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies are pleased to announce support for an exchange of scholars-in-residence.
USHMM and Ancestry.com help to find information about lost relatives
Sol Finkelstein had no idea what happened to his father. In 1945, just days before liberation at Mauthausen concentration camp, Sol and his father were separated, and Sol never saw him again. Recently Sol's family contacted the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) in hopes of finding more information about his father. The Museum discovered the date and place of Sol's fathers death.
Seventy years ago, on 26TH MARCH 1942, the first transport of Jews arrived in Auschwitz. They were young women between the ages of 16 and 22 and numbered from 1000—1999. However, if you look in the history books, there is hardly any mention of that first transport, nor recognition that the first transport was young women whose internment inaugurated what would be the most despicable death camp in history.