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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260222T210000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260222T223000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260210T125535Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260211T080907Z
UID:11013-1771794000-1771799400@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Talking Memory Book Launch
DESCRIPTION:Rescue and Remembrance: Imagining the German Collective After Nazism\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Ghetto Fighters’ House invites you to a special Talking Memory conversation marking the launch of Rescue and Remembrance: Imagining the German Collective After Nazism (University of Wisconsin Press\, 2025). \n\n\n\nIn this thought-provoking book\, Dr Kobi Kabalek examines how postwar German society has grappled with questions of rescue\, responsibility\, and collective memory after Nazism. His research explores how the rescue of Jews during the Holocaust has been understood\, remembered\, and represented in Germany from the Nazi period to the present. \n\n\n\nThe programme will include a short introduction to the book followed by a reflective conversation and audience discussion. \n\n\n\nIn Conversation\n\n\n\nDr Kobi Kabalek\n\n\n\nHolocaust Studies and Visual Studies\, Penn State University \n\n\n\nDr Kabalek’s work focuses on Holocaust memory\, visual culture\, and the ways rescue and responsibility have been interpreted in Germany since 1945. \n\n\n\nHarry Legg\n\n\n\nPhD candidate\, University of Edinburgh \n\n\n\nHarry Legg will comment on the book and its contribution to current research on the attitudes and actions of the non-Jewish German population toward Jews during the Nazi regime. \n\n\n\nTogether\, the speakers will reflect on memory\, postwar narratives\, the commemoration of rescuers\, and the ongoing challenges of confronting the past.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/talking-memory-book-launch/
LOCATION:Online
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260224T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260224T203000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260210T105039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260210T132313Z
UID:11008-1771959600-1771965000@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Film screening: I Never Said Goodbye
DESCRIPTION:Join us online on Tuesday 24 February at 7PM for a screening of the documentary\, “I Never Said Goodbye“\, tributing the extraordinary life of Holocaust survivor Héléne Joffe. \n\n\n\nThe film documents Héléne’s remarkable journey and is testimony to the endurance of the human spirit. \n\n\n\nDon’t miss out on this moving story of memory and resilience.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/film-screening-i-never-said-goodbye/
LOCATION:Online
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260304T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260304T193000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260224T084710Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260224T100847Z
UID:11076-1772647200-1772652600@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:What Gets Seen\, What Gets Silenced: Violence\, Complicity\, and Memory in the Holocaust
DESCRIPTION:Join the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre and the Sylt Foundation for a discussion panel exploring what was seen\, silenced\, and later remembered about the Holocaust. Through three perspectives – sexualised violence\, everyday complicity through stolen homes\, and the shaping of heroic memory – the talks reveal how genocide entered ordinary lives and spaces. Together\, they invite reflection on violence\, responsibility\, resistance\, and how Holocaust memory is constructed. \n\n\n\n“It was everywhere—in Buna\, in Auschwitz […] That’s a shame to tell.”: Sexualised Violence during the Holocaust – Larissa-Marie Lömpel\n\n\n\n“It was everywhere! In Buna\, in Auschwitz … That’s a shame to tell.“ With these words\, Sam Lubat captured both the pervasiveness of sexualised violence during the Holocaust and the silence that long surrounded it. This talk discusses both dimensions. \n\n\n\nDrawing on recent scholarship\, it maps the contexts in which sexualised violence occurred under National Socialist rule: from the mass shootings and pogroms in the occupied East to the ghettos\, hiding spaces\, and concentration camps of Nazi-ruled Europe. It examines the range of perpetrators – SS personnel\, Wehrmacht soldiers\, allied forces\, and civilians – as well as the complexity introduced by cases of victim perpetration. The lecture then turns to historiography\, asking why sexualised violence remained at the margins of Holocaust scholarship for so long. It traces how survivors navigated cultural taboos and institutional barriers when attempting to speak about their experiences\, and how scholars – shaped by similar constraints and by a universalised narrative of the Holocaust that left little room for gendered analysis – were slow to engage with the subject. By examining both the phenomenon and its fraught reception in testimony and scholarship\, the lecture contributes to an ongoing effort to bring sexualised violence into focus as a distinct and indispensable dimension of Holocaust history. \n\n\n\nLarissa-Marie Lömpel holds a BA in History and Gender Studies from the University of Göttingen and is currently completing an MA in Holocaust Studies at the University of Haifa. Her research interests include gendered violence\, perpetrator–victim relations\, and the intersections of historical scholarship and public memory. Her MA thesis examines sexualised violence in the Auschwitz camp complex. Alongside her studies\, she has been actively involved in Holocaust education and remembrance. During her undergraduate years\, she worked as a guide at the Bergen-Belsen and Moringen memorial sites and completed several internships in Germany and abroad. In 2024/25\, she worked as a researcher at the Anne Frank House. \n\n\n\nStolen Homes\, Taken Lives: Housing Expropriation and Everyday Complicity in the Holocaust – Indra Wussow\n\n\n\nThis seminar is based on Wussow’s PhD research on German Baltic settlers resettled by the Nazi regime into Łódź (Litzmannstadt)\, one of the central administrative sites of the Holocaust in occupied Poland. The talk examines housing expropriation as a key mechanism through which genocide entered everyday life. \n\n\n\nAt the centre of the seminar is a microhistorical case study: the appropriation of a Jewish family’s apartment by Bruno Carlhoff\, a resettled Baltic German who entered the Nazi administration in Łódź. Through archival material including housing files\, administrative records\, and later testimony\, she reconstructs how the Ajzen family was dispossessed of their home\, and how that same space was subsequently occupied and normalised by its new German inhabitants. \n\n\n\nFocusing on one apartment allows us to follow the Holocaust at a human scale: how removal\, reassignment\, and occupation were organised; how violence was translated into paperwork; and how perpetrators learned to live comfortably inside stolen spaces. Housing emerges here not as a marginal detail\, but as a central site of moral and material transformation—where racial entitlement was made tangible through rooms\, furniture\, and everyday routines. \n\n\n\nUsing microhistory as a method\, the seminar shows how complicity developed not primarily through ideological fervour or overt cruelty\, but through institutional permission\, emotional adjustment\, and the acceptance of “normal” advantages produced by persecution. By placing a perpetrator and a victim family in the same spatial frame\, the talk foregrounds the intimate proximity of genocide and challenges abstract understandings of participation in Nazi crimes. \n\n\n\nThe seminar offers an archive-based\, concrete perspective on how the Holocaust was lived\, enacted\, and normalised in cities like Łódź and why attention to stolen homes remains crucial for understanding responsibility\, memory\, and loss. \n\n\n\nIndra Wussow is a psychologist and Holocaust researcher working at the interface of history and psychology\, currently completing a PhD on everyday complicity in Nazi-occupied Łódź. She is the director of the Sylt Foundation\, and holds a MA in Holocaust Studies from the University of Haifa and a MA in Narrative Therapy from the University of Melbourne. \n\n\n\nZivia Lubetkin: How a Resistance Fighter Became a National Symbol – Andreea-Cristina Stanca\n\n\n\nHow does a young woman who fought in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising become a symbol for an entire nation? And what gets lost when a human life is turned into a heroic myth? \n\n\n\nThis presentation explores how the public memory of Zivia Lubetkin was shaped in the first decades of the State of Israel\, and how her story became central to a heroic model of Holocaust remembrance. Drawing on Lubetkin’s memoir and scholarship on Holocaust memory and Israeli nation-building\, the lecture shows how her image was mobilised to promote ideals of resistance\, strength\, and Zionist renewal at a moment when Israeli society was seeking unifying symbols. In this process\, armed resistance was elevated as a moral ideal\, while many other survivors experiences marked by vulnerability\, coercion\, and “choiceless choices” remained marginalised. \n\n\n\nThe conversation also traces the shift brought about by the Eichmann Trial\, when survivor testimonies reshaped public understanding of the Holocaust and complicated earlier myths of heroism. By returning to Lubetkin not only as a fighter but also as a woman who resisted the Nazis\, becoming a public icon and carrying her trauma into postwar life\, this talk argues for a more honest and humane memory culture\, one that remembers courage without erasing suffering and resistance without turning people into symbols. \n\n\n\nAndreea Stanca is engaged in her MA in Holocaust Studies at Haifa University\, focusing on Zionism\, Holocaust education\, antisemitism\, and Holocaust memory. She has published widely and is currently working on an article on political antisemitism in Romania. She is currently an intern at the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/what-gets-seen-what-gets-silenced-violence-complicity-and-memory-in-the-holocaust/
LOCATION:Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, 1 Duncombe Rd\, Johannesburg\, Gauteng\, 2193\, South Africa
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260314T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260314T170000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260303T084816Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260310T141450Z
UID:11153-1773500400-1773507600@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:ZAPP Fest Performance Showcase
DESCRIPTION:The Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, in collaboration with the South African Poetry Project (ZAPP)\, invites you to the 2026 ZAPP Fest Performance Showcase \n\n\n\nCome celebrate and enjoy the performances of an exciting group of young South African poets as they explore themes of community\, identity\, and human and animal rights. The poems which will be performed are the product of a one-day poetry workshop facilitated by the South African Poetry (ZAPP)\, a group of educators and professional poets who are dedicated to fostering a love of reading and writing poetry in schools.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/zapp-fest-performance-showcase-2/
LOCATION:Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, 1 Duncombe Rd\, Johannesburg\, Gauteng\, 2193\, South Africa
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260315T210000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260315T220000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260224T101859Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260303T105540Z
UID:11081-1773608400-1773612000@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:POSTPONED Talking Memory Book Launch
DESCRIPTION:The Ravine of Memory: Babyn Yar Between the Holocaust and the Great Patriotic War\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDue to unforeseen circumstances\, the Talking Memory book launch event\, \n\n\n\nThe Ravine of Memory: Babyn Yar Between the Holocaust and the Great Patriotic War\, \n\n\n\nscheduled for March 15th\, has been postponed. \n\n\n\nA new date will be announced\, and invitations will be resent accordingly. \n\n\n\nIn the meantime\, the Ghetto Fighters’ House extends its heartfelt thanks for your continued support of the Talking Memory programmes. \n\n\n\nThe Ghetto Fighters’ House invites you to a special Talking Memory program marking the launch of The Ravine of Memory: Babyn Yar Between the Holocaust and the Great Patriotic War. \n\n\n\nIn this conversation\, Dr. Shay A. Pilnik examines how Babyn Yar—where more than 100\,000 people\, the vast majority Jews\, were murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators—has been remembered\, reshaped\, and at times silenced in Soviet literature and culture. Drawing on Russian and Yiddish sources\, he revisits both well-known and lesser-known texts to show how Babyn Yar became a contested symbolic site\, revealing the tensions between official narratives\, suppressed Jewish memory\, and acts of cultural resistance. \n\n\n\nSpeakers\n\n\n\nDr. Shay A. PilnikDirector\, Emil A. and Jenny Fish Center for Holocaust and Genocide StudiesYeshiva University \n\n\n\nDr. Pilnik will discuss the central arguments of his book\, focusing on memory\, forgetting\, and representation in Soviet responses to Babyn Yar\, and the ways literature became a space for mourning\, testimony\, and moral reckoning. \n\n\n\nOpening Remarks:Dr. Arkadi ZeltserDirector\, Center for Research on the Holocaust in the Soviet UnionInternational Institute for Holocaust Research\, Yad Vashem \n\n\n\nDr. Zeltser will reflect on the historiography of Babyn Yar and its place within Soviet Holocaust history\, addressing how politics\, ideology\, and archival silences have shaped public understanding of the site. \n\n\n\nGuest Speaker:Dr. Marta HavryshkoHistorian and Dr. Thomas Zand Visiting Assistant Professor in Holocaust Pedagogy and Antisemitism StudiesStrassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies\, Clark University \n\n\n\nDr. Havryshko will speak about her research on Babyn Yar\, the challenges of commemorating mass violence in contemporary Ukraine\, and the ethical and political complexities involved in researching and memorialising the site today. \n\n\n\nThis programme is in partnership with the Emil A. and Jenny Fish Centre for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Yeshiva University\, The Zekelman Holocaust Centre\, Classrooms Without Borders\, the Rabin Chair Forum at George Washington University\, and the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/talking-memory-book-launch-2/
LOCATION:Online
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260322T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260322T170000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260316T074005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T074009Z
UID:11206-1774191600-1774198800@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Film Screening of AMAZEZE (Fleas)
DESCRIPTION:In honour of Human Rights Day\, the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre and Sanktuary Films invite you to join us for a film screening of Amazeze (Fleas). \n\n\n\nThe screening will be followed by a panel discussion on documenting and representing dehumanisation\, and xenophobic violence in South Africa. Speakers include writer and director Jordy Sank\, cast members\, and award-winning photojournalist James Oatway\, whose work is featured in the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre’s permanent exhibition. \n\n\n\nAbout the film\n\n\n\nTonderai\, a young Zimbabwean boy living in a South African township\, anxiously awaits his mother’s return from work at nightfall. He fears the worst for her due to a xenophobic mob running rampant that night. He watches over his gravely ill and bedridden younger brother\, who becomes desperate for drinking water. With no running water in their shack\, Tonderai must lurk like a rodent in the shadows to the communal tap to bring his brother back safe drinking water – In doing so\, he must risk his life as his neighbours are attacking foreigners. \n\n\n\nRuntime: 16 minutes
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/film-screening-of-amazeze-fleas/
LOCATION:Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, 1 Duncombe Rd\, Johannesburg\, Gauteng\, 2193\, South Africa
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Amazeze-Screening-poster-final.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260329T143000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260329T160000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260316T074646Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T075940Z
UID:11209-1774794600-1774800000@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Exhibition opening: Some Were Neighbours
DESCRIPTION:Choice\, Human Behaviour & the Holocaust\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n2:30 for 3pm \n\n\n\nSome Were Neighbours: Choice\, Human Behaviour\, and the Holocaust\, from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM)\, explores one of the central questions of the Holocaust: how it was possible. While Nazi leaders planned and directed the genocide of the Jews of Europe\, circles of collaboration and complicity rippled throughout governments and societies wherever victims of persecution and mass murder lived. \n\n\n\nFocusing on human behaviour\, the exhibition examines the motives and pressures that shaped individual choices – including fear\, indifference\, antisemitism\, peer pressure\, and the prospect of personal gain. At the same time\, it highlights those individuals who did not betray their fellow human beings\, reminding us that there is an alternative to complicity in evil acts\, even in extraordinary times. \n\n\n\nRomanian Holocaust survivor Lyonell Fliss\, who survived the Iași Pogrom\, will deliver the keynote speech\, sharing his insights on collaborators and rescuers.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/exhibition-opening-some-were-neighbours/
LOCATION:Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, 1 Duncombe Rd\, Johannesburg\, Gauteng\, 2193\, South Africa
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Some-were-neighbours-opening.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260331T174500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260331T184500
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260316T075307Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T075405Z
UID:11214-1774979100-1774982700@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Urban Class Structure in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Case Studies from Johannesburg and Tshwane
DESCRIPTION:Ph.D Dissertation presentation by DaQuan Lawrence (Howard University)\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nIn honour of Human Rights Month\, Howard University Ph.D. candidate DaQuan Lawrence\, presents research findings from his dissertation entitled\, “Urban Class Structure in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Case Studies from Johannesburg and Tshwane”. \n\n\n\nAmid the 32nd anniversary of South Africa’s transition to a democratic and post-apartheid society\, Lawrence research consists of an investigation of the class structure in post-apartheid South Africa’s municipalities of Johannesburg and Pretoria. The study seeks to discover how race continues to shape urban class constructions in South Africa\, and how the middle class defined in urban South Africa. \n\n\n\nLawrence seeks to construct rudimentary but sophisticated class categories that are informed by South Africans. Utilizing class analysis tools provided by African diaspora scholars the theoretical bases of class in advanced industrialized societies of Western civilization are revised in order to allow application to 21st century\, urban South African conditions. \n\n\n\nDaQuan Lawrence is an international human rights activist and Sasakawa Young Leaders Foundation Fellow who hails from Harlem\, New York. Lawrence currently works as a middle school educator\, international freelance journalist and an African Studies Ph.D. candidate at Howard University. With a background in NYC foster homes and experience in urban poverty\, he uses public policy research and human rights advocacy to equip young people\, marginalized communities\, nonprofit practitioners\, as well as public and private sector representatives with the tools to change social and economic conditions.  \n\n\n\nHis current research focuses on public policy in Africa\, and his dissertation is a qualitative mixed methods study that investigates class and urban segregation through a Marxist\, Weberian\, and pro- and pan-African conceptual framework. Lawrence seeks to develop new post-Marxist\, international class categories based on an African perspective of the global political economy\, that can be utilized in both developed and underdeveloped nations. He utilizes his experience to lead the nonprofit he cofounded\, Strong Men Overcoming Obstacles Through Hard-work\, (SMOOTH) Inc.\, which is a mentoring\, professional development and community service organization for Black males. He is also the founder and CEO of the business consulting firm Lawrence International\, and creator of GlobalBlackForum.com\, a network that connects the African diaspora across nations\, sectors and generations. \n\n\n\nLawrence has worked for Washington D.C.-based nonprofits and international nongovernment organizations such as the Urban Institute and the Center for African Studies at Howard University on policy programs\, research\, and human rights advocacy.  He has experience working on public policy research in Haiti\, Indonesia\, the Dominican Republic\, Liberia\, South Africa and in the United States. Lawrence is a graduate of Morgan State University and the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies\, and a delegate for the United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent.  \n\n\n\nThe event will also be livestreamed here and here
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/urban-class-structure-in-post-apartheid-south-africa-case-studies-from-johannesburg-and-tshwane/
LOCATION:Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, 1 Duncombe Rd\, Johannesburg\, Gauteng\, 2193\, South Africa
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Urban-Class-Structure-in-Post-Apartheid-South-Africa.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260413T074500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260413T104500
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260407T075843Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260407T075846Z
UID:11260-1776066300-1776077100@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Move with intention
DESCRIPTION:Pilates | 7:45–8:30am       Chair Pilates | 10:00–10:45am \n\n\n\nEltiar Wellness in partnership with the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre and Issy’s Coffee & Gift Shop invite you to join us for a complimentary trial session. \n\n\n\nIssy’s Coffee & Gift Shop will be offering a free cappuccino and bulka to each participant! \n\n\n\nPilates | 7:45–8:30am \n\n\n\nA guided movement practice focused on strength\, control\, and awareness of the body. \n\n\n\n\nImproves posture and alignment\n\n\n\nBuilds deep\, functional strength\, especially in core and stability muscles\n\n\n\nReduces stiffness and physical tension\n\n\n\nSupports injury prevention and long-term mobility\n\n\n\n\nChair Pilates | 10:00–10:45am \n\n\n\nA gentle version of pilates done while seated or with support. \n\n\n\n\nDesigned for anyone who would benefit from a slower\, more supported pace\n\n\n\nSuitable for all mobility levels including older individuals and anyone with mobility concerns\n\n\n\nFocus on balance and joint movement\n\n\n\nBuilds confidence in the body\n\n\n\n\nSpaces are limited to 20 people per session. RSVP is essential. \n\n\n\nNo experience necessary. Wear comfortable\, loose-fitting clothing. All are welcome.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/move-with-intention/
LOCATION:Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, 1 Duncombe Rd\, Johannesburg\, Gauteng\, 2193\, South Africa
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Pilates-poster-correct.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260416T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260416T183000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260316T080123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260320T120547Z
UID:11218-1776358800-1776364200@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Art\, Memory\, and Responsibility: Working Through the Afterlives of the Holocaust
DESCRIPTION:5 for 5:30pm \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPlease join the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, in partnership with the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in Pretoria and the British High Commission in Pretoria\, for a panel discussion with art historian and curator Dr Dorothea Schöne and artist Jessica Ostrowicz. \n\n\n\nThe discussion will explore how curatorial and artistic practice engages with the afterlives of the Holocaust\, examining questions of memory\, responsibility\, and the ways histories marked by persecution and rupture continue to shape contemporary cultural and artistic discourse. \n\n\n\nDr Dorothea Schöne is a Berlin-based art historian and curator\, currently serving as Director and CEO of Kunsthaus Dahlem. Under her leadership\, Kunsthaus Dahlem – located in the former studio of Nazi-era sculptor Arno Breker – has become an important space for critically engaging with the complex legacies of art and ideology in twentieth-century Germany. Her research focuses on modern and contemporary art and curatorial practice. Schöne has received numerous international research grants and fellowships and was awarded the Hans-and Lea-Grundig Prize for her work on artists targeted under National Socialism. \n\n\n\nJessica Ostrowicz is a British artist whose practice explores ideas of home\, (be)longing\, diasporic displacement\, and transgenerational trauma. Working from the perspective of own Jewish family history\, her work reflects on the ways experiences of persecution and migration shape personal and collective identities across generations. Her recent exhibition Remaining Without Returning reflects on her family’s history of flight\, concealment\, and survival during and after the Holocaust\, and the lasting presence of this history in contemporary life. Ostrowicz has exhibited internationally\, including at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Oaxaca\, Ikon Gallery in Birmingham\, the Jewish Museum in Frankfurt\, and the Nirox Foundation in South Africa. \n\n\n\nThrough a conversation between curator and artist\, this event will consider how contemporary art and exhibition practices engage with difficult histories\, and how memory of the Holocaust continues to be interpreted\, represented\, and worked through today.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/art-memory-and-responsibility-working-through-the-afterlives-of-the-holocaust/
LOCATION:Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, 1 Duncombe Rd\, Johannesburg\, Gauteng\, 2193\, South Africa
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Art-memory-and-responsibility.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260419T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260419T163000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260407T072928Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260407T094504Z
UID:11255-1776610800-1776616200@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Book Launch: Darker Shade of Pale by Deborah Posel
DESCRIPTION:The Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre and Issy’s Coffee & Gift Shop invite you to a book launch for Darker Shade of Pale: Shtetl to Colony by Deborah Posel. \n\n\n\nDarker Shade of Pale traces the journey of Jewish families from the Russian Empire to colonial South Africa. Through the story of her grandfather Maurice Posel – an ordinary man whose struggles and disappointments mirror those of countless others – Deborah Posel challenges the common narrative of Jewish immigrant success in South Africa\, revealing a more complex and painful reality. \n\n\n\nPart memoir\, part global history\, part meditation on inherited trauma\, the book uncovers how preoccupations with status and success travelled from shtetl to colony\, and the psychological costs they incurred: the traumas of dislocation\, the weight of ambition\, and the shame of failure. It explores the ironies of this journeying for literate\, working women from the shtetl; the version of whiteness that South Africa assigned to Jews from Eastern Europe\, the various ways in which Jews interacted with Black people\, and some of the unexpected economic routes they chose\, as well as the prejudicial punches that Jewish immigrants had to take – from both the British and the already-assimilated English-speaking Jewish community in South Africa. \n\n\n\nThrough one man’s unfulfilled hopes\, Darker Shade of Pale asks what was truly given and what was taken in the making of new lives. \n\n\n\nDeborah Posel is a sociologist and Professor Emeritus at the University of Cape Town\, founding director of the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research (WiSER) and UCT’s Institute for Humanities in Africa (HUMA). She has written extensively on South Africa’s past and present\, and on the making of its racial order. \n\n\n\nDeborah will be in conversation with Tali Nates\, Founder and Executive Director of the JHGC\, and Courtneigh Cloud Bernstein.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/book-launch-darker-shade-of-pale-by-deborah-posel/
LOCATION:Issy’s Coffee & Gift Shop\, 1 Duncombe Road\, Forest Town\, 2193\, South Africa
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Darker-Shade-of-Pale-poster.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260503T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260503T210000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260423T121744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260423T121747Z
UID:11277-1777838400-1777842000@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Talking Memory Programme: Letters from the Afterlife
DESCRIPTION:The Post-Holocaust Correspondence of Chava Rosenfarb and Zenia Larsson\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Ghetto Fighters’ House invites you to a special Talking Memory conversation with acclaimed writer and translator Goldie Morgentaler as she presents her novel Letters from the Afterlife: The Post-Holocaust Correspondence of Chava Rosenfarb and Zenia Larsson. \n\n\n\nLetters from the Afterlife tells the story of two women who survived the Holocaust and rebuilt their lives in countries whose language and culture were not their own – one in Canada\, one in Sweden. Through the correspondence between them\, the book traces what it meant to carry that past forward: the trauma\, the alienation\, and the quiet\, persistent work of making a life. \n\n\n\nExtraordinarily little has been written about how women survivors navigated the aftermath. This book is a rare exception. \n\n\n\nThe programme will feature: \n\n\n\nRochelle Saidel will open the conversation with reflections on the book as an intimate window into postwar women’s experience. \n\n\n\nGoldie Morgentaler\, writer\, translator\, and daughter of celebrated author and Holocaust survivor Chava Rosenfarb\, will discuss the book\, the correspondence at its heart\, and what it means to write from inside inherited memory. \n\n\n\nThis event is presented in partnership with the Remember the Women Institute\, the Rabin Chair Forum\, the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, and Classrooms Without Borders.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/talking-memory-programme-letters-from-the-afterlife/
LOCATION:Online
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260517T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260517T200000
DTSTAMP:20260429T190940
CREATED:20260423T122420Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260423T122423Z
UID:11280-1779044400-1779048000@jhbholocaust.co.za
SUMMARY:Talking Memory Book Launch Event: Out of the Sky
DESCRIPTION:Heroism and Rebirth in Nazi Europe With the Author Matti Friedman\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Ghetto Fighters’ House invites you to a special Talking Memory conversation marking the launch of Out of the Sky: Heroism and Rebirth in Nazi Europe. \n\n\n\nIn 1944\, a group of young Jewish men and women – having escaped Europe – made the decision to return. Parachuting into Nazi-occupied territory under a British mission\, they went back to the continent that had tried to destroy them. Out of the Sky tells their story: the gap between the mission’s tragic reality and its powerful afterlife in Israeli memory\, and the question of what heroism means when it ends in failure. \n\n\n\nThe programme will feature: \n\n\n\nMatti Friedman\, author of Out of the Sky\, in conversation on the Jewish parachutists of 1944\, the archival research behind the book\, and the role of narrative in shaping collective memory. \n\n\n\nDr Rochelle Saidel will speak on Haviva Reick (1914–1944)\, one of three women among the parachutists\, who operated in Slovakia during the Slovak National Uprising – aiding Allied airmen\, working to rescue Jews\, and ultimately captured and murdered by Nazi collaborators. \n\n\n\nShlomit Dagan\, CEO of the Hannah Senesh House\, will reflect on Hannah Senesh and the ongoing work of remembrance and education. \n\n\n\nThis event is presented in partnership with the Remember the Women Institute\, the Hannah Senesh House\, Classrooms Without Borders\, the Johannesburg Holocaust & Genocide Centre\, and the Rabin Chair Forum at George Washington University.
URL:https://jhbholocaust.co.za/event/talking-memory-book-launch-event-out-of-the-sky/
LOCATION:Online
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