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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh
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DTSTART:20230312T070000
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DTSTART:20231105T060000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231002
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231201
DTSTAMP:20260403T193936
CREATED:20231003T155459Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231108T161806Z
UID:25489-1696204800-1701388799@hcofpgh.org
SUMMARY:The Fruits of Hate: A French City During the Holocaust
DESCRIPTION:Dr. David Rosenberg’s exhibit “The Fruits of Hate: A French City During the Holocaust” opened at the Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall on Monday\, October 2\, for its premiere exhibition at a public library in the United States. This international exhibit has been featured at the University of Pittsburgh\, the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh\, Bower Hill Community Church\, Temple Emanuel\, and Duquesne University. It has also been shown in a French version at the University of Picardy and in several French high schools\, and will be on display starting January 2024 at the Bibliothèque Louis Aragon public library in Amiens. \nThe exhibit delves into questions of official\, cultural\, and religious Jewish identity in the French city of Amiens from 1940-45. The use of identification cards\, personal correspondence\, photos\, and audio recordings bring a compelling immediacy to the exhibit. Several of these elements have been added or expanded upon since this exhibit’s most recent showing. New translations of personal correspondence by Grove City College French students are also included. In a time of rising anti-Semitism\, remembering and engaging with the atrocities of the Holocaust finds an increased urgency and importance. \n“The Fruits of Hate” is open to the public during regular Library hours from October 2 through November 30. \nDr. David Rosenberg received a Ph.D. in European History from Yale University with a dissertation on the Protestant movement in Amiens in the 16th century. After a decades long engagement with that particular city and its history\, Dr. Rosenberg embarked in 2011 on the study of the fate of its Jewish community especially during the Shoah. As a byproduct of his research\, Rosenberg consulted with the Departmental Archives of the Somme to enrich their holdings and digital representation of Jewish- related materials. With daughter Lydia Rosenberg and Jared Miller\, he created a website containing several hundred scans of original documents related to the Jews of the Somme during the Occupation with introductions in English (www.jewsofthesomme.com). In 2013 he was named a Knight in the Order of Arts and Letters by the French government\, and he received the Medal of the City of Amiens in 2023 for his contributions to the history and memory of that region.
URL:https://hcofpgh.org/event/the-fruits-of-hate-a-french-city-during-the-holocaust-2/
LOCATION:Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall\, 300 Beechwood Avenue\, Carnegie\, PA\, 15106\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231007
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231122
DTSTAMP:20260403T193936
CREATED:20230627T145208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230627T145208Z
UID:24325-1696636800-1700611199@hcofpgh.org
SUMMARY:Violins of Hope Greater Pittsburgh Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Violins of Hope Greater Pittsburgh\, is a landmark community project centered on the valuable lessons of diversity\, equity\, and inclusion. Over the course of two months\, through educational and cultural programs\, this unique project will use lessons of the Holocaust to demonstrate humanity’s amazing ability to rebound from even the darkest depravity. The centerpiece of this project will be an exhibit of stringed instruments that were played by Jewish prisoners in the concentration camps during the Holocaust. This exhibit will be free to the public and housed at the Posner Center on the campus of Carnegie Mellon University. There\, trained docents will facilitate an understanding of the role that music played in the life of prisoners\, whether as a mechanism for survival\, mental escape\, or even resistance. The mere existence of each instrument merits a story of hope and survival. Together\, we are tuning out prejudice and building bridges that last. \nOver the course of two months\, through educational and cultural programs and exhibits\, this unique project will\, through lessons of the Holocaust\, demonstrate humanity’s amazing ability to rebound from even the darkest depravity. The centerpiece of this event is the Violins of Hope Exhibit\, which showcases violins played by Jewish musicians during the Holocaust. Each instrument has a unique emotional history that tells a story of perseverance and hope. \nPittsburgh has long been known as the City of Bridges\, with a multitude of these unique and colorful structures that connect our communities and our diverse backgrounds. These connectors have enabled us to come together to celebrate our shared cultural\, educational\, social\, and vocational activities. \n  \nHow better to underscore these sharedvalues than through a landmark collaboration of the arts\, religious institutions\, community organizations\, education professionals\, and musicians. Violins of Hope Greater Pittsburgh will present impactful programming throughout our community\, reinforcing the valuable lessons of diversity\, equity\, and inclusion that are essential to our future.
URL:https://hcofpgh.org/event/violins-of-hope-greater-pittsburgh-exhibit/
LOCATION:Posner Center\, Carnegie Mellon University Campus
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20231011
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231118
DTSTAMP:20260403T193936
CREATED:20231018T165850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231108T163055Z
UID:25619-1696982400-1700265599@hcofpgh.org
SUMMARY:The Righteous Among the Nations\, a Yad Vashem exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Dates: October 11-November 17 \nGallery Hours: M-F 11am-5:30pm\, Weekends by Appointment   \nLocation: Susan Bergman Gurrentz ’56 Art Gallery\, Chatham University\, 1 Woodland Rd.\, Pittsburgh\, PA\, 15232\n(The gallery appears as Chatham University Art Gallery when searched for on Google Maps)  \nCost: The exhibition is free and open to the public \nYad Vashem’s exhibition “Righteous Among the Nations” tells the stories of 17 people who rescued Jews during the Holocaust. In a world in which hostility and indifference prevailed\, there was a small non-Jewish minority who regarded the Jews as fellow human beings who came within the bounds of their universe of obligation. These individuals mustered extraordinary courage to uphold human values\, and to rescue hunted Jews with no expectation of remuneration. These were the Righteous Among the Nations. Rescue took many forms and the Righteous came from different nations\, religions and walks of life. What they had in common was that they protected their Jewish neighbors in a world of total moral collapse. \nCo-sponsored by Chatham University and the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh \nA community partner event for Violins of Hope Greater Pittsburgh \nFor more information contact: j.louks@chatham.edu
URL:https://hcofpgh.org/event/the-righteous-among-the-nations-a-yad-vashem-exhibit/
LOCATION:Susan Bergman Gurrentz ’56 Art Gallery\, Chatham University\, 1 Woodland Rd.\, Pittsburgh\, PA\, 15232\, United States
CATEGORIES:Sponsored by HCP
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