The Gandel Holocaust Studies Program for Australian Educators

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The Gandel Holocaust Studies Program for Australian Educators THE INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL FOR HOLOCAUST STUDIES YAD VASHEM, JERUSALEM, ISRAEL The Gandel Holocaust Studies Program for Australian Educators TEACHING ABOUT THE SHOAH AND ANTISEMITISM December 28, 2014 January 14, 2015 This Seminar is also generously supported by the Raoul Wallenberg Unit of B nai B rith Melbourne by awarding Pauline Glass Study Grants

Sunday, December 28, 2014 Prima Kings Hotel 20:00 Orientation at the Prima Kings Hotel, Jerusalem Introducing the team - an explanation of the goals and objectives of the Gandel Holocaust Studies Program for Australian Educators. The structure of the seminar: the academic, pedagogical, and experiential elements of the program. Participant introductions: who they are, where they come from, what they are doing professionally, and why they came to the seminar. Dr. Eyal Kaminka Lily Safra Chair of Holocaust Education, Director ISHS Avinoam Armoni Gandel Philanthropy Representative in Israel Ephraim Kaye Director, International Seminars for Educators, Project Director, Gandel Program Nurit Davidson Educational Supervisor, Gandel Holocaust Studies Program for Australian Educators Stephanie McMahon-Kaye Desk for International Seminars in English Dorit Raviv Department Coordinator, International Seminars for Educators Monday, December 29, 2014 08:30-10:00 Jews and Judaism - Between History and Faith Who are the Jews? We will briefly study the history and beliefs of the Jewish people from the biblical period until the modern era. The Jews are a covenantal people who ascribe sanctity to time their calendar, as well as to space their land; we will consider the implications of both. To be "chosen" lies at the heart of Jewish identity and we will look at its particularistic, as well as its universalistic aspects. Finally, we will consider the comprehensive interaction between peoplehood, Torah, and the Land of Israel as we develop the special concept of Tikkun Olam or repair of the world. Rabbi Michael Hattin, Pardes Institute for Jewish Studies 10:00-10:15 Break 10:15-11:00 Using Technology in Teaching the Holocaust Exploring the Yad Vashem and ISHS website An overview of Yad Vashem s extensive online resources and collections. In addition we will introduce the participants to the International School for Holocaust Studies website, focusing on online educational tools for teachers and students. We will look at the online courses, which are available for teachers. Sheryl Ochayon, Yad Vashem 11:00-11:15 Break

11:15-12:45 The Educational Philosophy of the International School for Holocaust Studies How do we teach and incorporate the stories of the victims, perpetrators and bystanders? Where do we begin? Who were the perpetrators? What was their ideology and motivation? How was it humanly possible? How do we define the bystanders? How do some become indifferent while others decide to become Righteous Among the Nations? How do we teach the Holocaust in an age-appropriate manner and what is the importance of inter-disciplinary materials? Shulamit Imber, Pedagogical Director, International School for Holocaust Studies 12:45-17:30 Lunch & Bus Tour of Jerusalem with Haggai Kimmelman Haggai Kimmelman will introduce the participants to the geographical/political aspects of the city of Jerusalem and will tour Gilo, Armon Hanatziv, (an overview of the eastern and southern part of the city with a beautiful view of the Old City,) and Mt. Scopus (with a view of the western and northern parts of the new city and the Old City.) Then the tour will continue on to the Tomb of the Prophet Samuel for an overview of the northern and western entrances of the city. 17:30 Return to the Hotel Tuesday, December 30, 2014 08:30-10:00 Presentation of an Educational Unit on Teaching Jewish Politics and Parties in Interwar Poland: 1919-1939 (Zionists, Orthodox, and the Bund) Who are the Jews of Poland? What were the major issues that the different political parties faced in interwar Poland? What were possible solutions that each political party put forward to improve their situation? Using film excerpts from Image Before My Eyes, this educational unit will explore these questions in an attempt to understand the Jewish community of Poland in the interwar period on the eve of their destruction. Ephraim Kaye, Yad Vashem 10:00-10:30 Break 10:30-12:00 Discussion groups and classroom implementation: How and what do we teach on prewar Jewish life? - Mobile Educational Unit on Jewish Life in Poland Orit Margaliot, Yad Vashem 12:00-13:00 Lunch Break

13:00-14:30 Antecedents to Holocaust Writing in Eastern European Jewish Culture Literary responses to the Holocaust did not come out of the blue. Earlier Eastern European Jewish writers felt called upon to confront disasters of their generation, including lethal pogroms and the terrible carnage of WWI. We will look at examples of this writing by Sholem Aleichem, S. Ansky, Jacob Glatstein, and others in order to get a sense of the literary landscape of pre-wwii Eastern Europe. Dr. Abraham (Alan) Rosen, Lecturer of Holocaust Literature and Testimony 14:30-15:00 Break 15:00-17:00 The Valley of the Communities as a Resource for Teaching Pre-war Jewish Life- a tour and survivor testimony The Valley of the Communities is a memorial to the Jewish communities that were destroyed during the Holocaust. We will explore the concept behind the memorial and the educational uses of the site for students and teachers. We will hear a survivor relate her pre-war experiences in the Valley. Hannah Pick, Germany and Holland 17:00 Return to the Hotel Wednesday, December 31, 2014 VIP ROOM 08:30-12:00 Guided Tour of the New Holocaust History Museum of Yad Vashem an educational and methodological approach What are the educational concepts and objectives that were imbedded in the new historical museum? How does the architectural design of the museum influence the way that the story is told? The personalization of the story of the Holocaust as it is reflected in the chronological and thematic aspects of the new museum. Ephraim Kaye, Yad Vashem 12:00 13:00 Lunch Break 13:00-14:00 Debriefing What are your impressions of the new Holocaust History Museum? 14:00-14:15 Break

14:15-15:15 Presentation of the Learning Center Reflections After the Holocaust This new learning center presents 17 of the major questions asked as a result of the Holocaust. Questions such as: Where was God during the Holocaust? What were the dilemmas facing the Jewish leadership? How did the Christians respond to the Holocaust? Are there limitations to the artistic representation of the Holocaust? These and other questions are explored through interviews with scholars both Jewish and non-jewish from Israel and abroad. Nurit Davidson, Yad Vashem 15:15-15:30 Break 15:30-16:30 The Educational Projects of Participants Guidelines Participants will receive explanations regarding the guidelines for their educational projects that they will develop after the completion of this seminar. Nurit Davidson and the Yad Vashem staff 16:30 Return to the Hotel 19:00-21:00 Optional Guided Tour of the Western Wall Tunnels in the Old City of Jerusalem Thursday, January 1, 2015 08:30-10:00 Jews, Judaism, and Anti-Judaism in the Ancient World Who are the Jews in antiquity (the time of the 1st and 2nd Temple)? What was the attitude towards the Jews in the Pagan world Persia, Greece, and Rome? What were the effects of Anti-Judaism and Philo- Judaism during this period? How did the rise of Christianity affect these relationships? Rivkah Duker-Fishman, Hebrew University 10:00-10:30 Break 10:30-12:00 Judaism and Anti-Judaism in Medieval Christianity Defining characteristics of the Jewish experience during the Middle Ages life in the Diaspora under the rule of Christianity and Islam; social marginality; collective identity; dimensions of a typical Jewish world view: biblical foundations, rabbinic authority (the Talmud), an obsession with Galut. Milestones in the development of Christian anti-judaism: from the Apostle Paul to the Church Fathers; the legacy of Saint Augustine; Jews as infidels and heretics; the demonization of the Jew in the later Middle Ages. Prof. Jeremy Cohen, Tel Aviv University

12:00-13:00 Lunch Break 13:00-14:30 The Intellectuals and Rise of Modern Antisemitism in Europe 19th and 20th Century Intellectuals were founders of many modern ideologies, including that of Antisemitism and left wing versions of Jew-hatred, as well as their complicity in totalitarian movements like Fascism, Nazism, Communism, or Islamism. Prof. Robert Wistrich, Hebrew University 14:30-15:00 Break 15:00-16:00 Reflection on Antisemitism after the Holocaust - a question and answer session Prof. Robert Wistrich, Hebrew University 16:00-16:30 Break 16:30-17:30 Presentation of the New Video Tool Box of the ISHS on Antisemitism: An educational discussion with the participants Shani Lourie, Yad Vashem 17:30 Return to the Hotel ** The Historical Museum will be open until 20:00. Transportation can be arranged**

Friday, January 2, 2015 8:30-10:00 Nazi Racial Ideology and the Jewish Question What are the basic tenants of Nazi racial ideology? What are the antecedents of this ideology? What were the innovations adopted by Hitler? What was the centrality of the Jewish Question within this Weltanschauung? How can we deconstruct rationality vs. irrationality in the Nazi mind? Dr. Irit Abramski 10:00-10:15 Break 10:15-11:45 Persecution of the Jews in Nazi Germany: 1933-1939 This lecture traces Hitler s consolidation of power and the anti-jewish decrees between 1933 and 1939, the attitudes of different social and economic elites to Hitler s Anti-Semitic policy (academics at universities, doctors, lawyers, industrialists, & clergy) and the effect that this had on the Jewish population. We will look at the Aryanization of Jewish property and its effect on Germans of all social and economic strata in Nazi Germany. Why was there overwhelming support in Germany for Hitler and his regime preceding WWII? Dr. Gideon Greif, "Shem Olam" Faith and the Holocaust Institute, Israel 11:45-12:00 Break 12:00-13:00 Discussion groups and classroom implementation How do we teach the phenomena of Nazi racial ideology in the classroom?" - Presentation of different materials that teachers can use in their classrooms. (The film "Outcast" and poster series "But the Story Didn t End That Way") Nurit Davidson, Yad Vashem 13:00 Return to the Hotel

Friday Night The Great Synagogue 15:45 Shabbat Evening Service at the Great Synagogue (optional) with Nurit Davidson and her family and Steffie and Ephraim Kaye We invite all of the participants to take part in an Orthodox Jewish service celebrating the Shabbat. The participants will be provided with selected materials in English so that they can follow the service Communal Shabbat meal with Yad Vashem staff members. After the meal, there will be an optional discussion about elements of the Torah portion for that week and its connection to current events. Saturday, January 3, 2015 Old City 08:30-16:00 Optional Tour of Jewish and Christian Quarters of the Old City with Amir Golani This tour will take the participants to visit the Western Wall (the Kotel) and from there they will walk to the Christian Quarter and visit the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, to Mount Zion, and to the traditional site of the Last Supper. Sunday, January 4, 2015 Tel Aviv 08:30-19:00 A trip to Tel Aviv including a guided tour of Independence Hall, the Palmach Museum and the Old City of Jaffa with Amir Golani This tour will take us to Independence Hall where the participants will experience the place where David Ben Gurion proclaimed the independent State of Israel on Friday afternoon, May 14, 1948. Then we will visit the Palmach Museum, where the participants will have a guided tour. The Palmach was the strike force of the Haganah, the pre-state underground defense organization that was incorporated into the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) after 1948. After our visit to the museum we will travel to the site of ancient Jaffa, and relax in a coffeehouse along the Tel Aviv seashore.

Monday, January 5, 2015 08:30-10:00 Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art): Nazi Aesthetics and the Campaign Against Modernism "Art in the Third Reich" examines the issues and historical context surrounding two state-sponsored exhibitions mounted one day apart in the summer of 1937 in Munich: the infamous Degenerate Art exhibition and the Great German Art Exhibition in the House of German Art. Through a variety of media, we explore both the aesthetic espoused by Hitler and the Nazi party as well as the cultural repression and censorship of modernist art (labeled "degenerate") and the fates of the individual artists banned, exiled and targeted in the purges. Rachel will present the online lesson that she developed for the website. Dr. Rachel Perry, Tel Aviv University 10:00-10:15 Break 10:15-10:45 The Holocaust and Art: a Teaching Tool in the Classroom, an online lesson Dr. Rachel Perry, Tel Aviv University 10:45-11:00 Break 11:00-12:30 An Introduction to Jewish Leadership during the Shoah Why did the Germans create ghettos throughout Eastern Europe? Why did the Germans create Jewish councils in both Eastern and Western Europe? What functions did they fulfill for the Germans? How did the Jewish community feel towards these councils? How did the Jewish leadership of these councils respond to the Nazi demands for forced labor/deportations? How did the eastern and western Europe councils differ in their response to the Nazi demands? What were the parallels? Dr. Rob Rozett, Yad Vashem 12:30-14:30 Lunch Break discussion time for educational projects with Yad Vashem staff 14:30-15:30 Everyday Life of the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto (Educational Unit for High School) A documentation of life in the Warsaw Ghetto based on photographs taken by a German soldier in September, 1941. This educational unit combines these photographs with diaries from Jews that lived in the Warsaw Ghetto (Mary Berg, Chaim Kaplan, & Emanuel Ringelblum) in order to emphasize their struggle to survive. (Iberleben) Nurit Davidson, Yad Vashem

15:30-16:00 Break 16:00-17:30 Music of the Jews in the Holocaust One of the most amazing phenomena during the Holocaust is that Jews never stopped playing, singing and composing music: all kinds of music- classic, jazz, folk, religious etc During this presentation, we will try to understand the roles that music played by listening to songs and their stories. Tamar Machado, Musicologist 17:30 Return to the Hotel Tuesday, January 6, 2015 08:30-09:30 Teaching Cultural and Spiritual Resistance Using Echoes and Reflections - Lesson #6 Echoes and Reflections is an educational unit developed as a collaborative project between the ADL, the Shoah Foundation, and Yad Vashem. This interdisciplinary unit is comprised of 10 lessons that cover various aspects of the history of the Holocaust using both Holocaust survivor testimony and source materials, in an effort to combat prejudice and discrimination in society today. This unit was developed for the high school level. This lesson will look at examples of resistance without a bullet or a gun. Ultimately not all resistance assured life to the Jews, but the very act of choosing one s own way in spite of the circumstances can serve as a topic of reflection and perhaps inspiration in the classroom. Examples will be taken from several ghettos of the period. Stephanie McMahon-Kaye, Yad Vashem 09:30-10:00 Break 10:00-11:00 Age Appropriate Approach to Teaching the Holocaust (Educational Materials Created by the ISHS) Elementary school/middle school/high school: 'Tomi', 'I wanted to fly like a Butterfly', 'Martha', 'Through Our Eyes.' Nurit Davidson, Yad Vashem 11:00-11:30 Implementation 11:30-13:30 Lunch Break - discussion time for educational projects with Yad Vashem staff

13:30-15:00 Literary Responses to the Holocaust What is literature? How does literary response differ from other approaches to the Holocaust? What have been the various kinds of literary responses? How have literary responses to the Holocaust changed from the time of the war to the present day? How do the different languages of this literature shape the response to the Holocaust? Dr. Abraham (Alan) Rosen, Lecturer of Holocaust Literature and Testimony 15:00-15:30 Break 15:30-17:00 Movies in the Classroom: Understanding and Teaching Fictional Holocaust Film Some would say that today s pinnacle of culture is fictional film. Unfortunately, as the number of Holocaust-related films has steadily increased, students are learning about the Holocaust from a- historical films such as Inglorious Bastards, The Devil s Arithmetic, The Reader, and The Boy in the Stripped Pajamas. Can film be used responsibly to teach the Holocaust? The two goals of this class are: understanding the Holocaust film genre and learning how to teach the Holocaust through film. Rich Brownstein 17:00 Return to the Hotel / Optional Guided Tour of the Israel Museum with Amir Golani 20:00 Return to the Hotel Wednesday, January 7, 2015 08:30-10:00 The Decision to Kill the Jews -The Final Solution and Its Implementation Who gave the order to murder the Jews? Was it Hitler? Himmler? Göring or Heydrich? Was it one person or a group of people? Did the order come from "above"- the highest echelon of power-- or from "below" -junior officials? When was this order given? The intententionalists and the functionalists--what were their positions? Was it one order or a series of orders over a period of time? What is the importance of the Wannsse Conference in this sequence of events? Who was involved in perpetrating the murders? The SS, the ORPO, and the Wehrmacht?? Who collaborated with the Nazis in order to murder their Jewish neighbors? Ordinary men vs. Ordinary Germans? Ephraim Kaye, Yad Vashem 10:00-10:30 Break

10:30-11:30 The Final Solution Using Echoes and Reflections - Lesson #5 Lesson five with its strong emphasis on literature in various forms will be introduced and discussed. This will include testimony from the Echoes and Reflections curriculum, poetry, and an excerpt from "Night." Stephanie McMahon-Kaye, Yad Vashem 11:30-13:00 Lunch Break discussion time for educational projects with Yad Vashem staff 13:00-17:00 A Workshop with Four Holocaust Survivors Rachel Hershkowitz- Poland, Daniel Gold- Lithuania, Yehudit Kleinman- Italy, Tibi Ram- Slovakia 1) 13:00-13:15 - Introduction to the workshop- the rationale 2) 13:15-15:45 - We will meet with four Holocaust survivors from different countries who will relate short episodes from their personal experiences. The participants will be able to ask the survivors questions about their experiences. There will also be an opportunity to talk to the survivors in small informal groups. 3) 16:00-17:00 - This will be a debriefing session and will allow the participants to express their feelings and thoughts as a result of this encounter with the survivors. How do we incorporate survivor testimonies in our classrooms? 17:00 Return to the Hotel Thursday, January 8, 2015 08:30-10:00 The Allies and the Holocaust- Why Wasn t Auschwitz Bombed? The lecture examines the Allies' responses to the Shoah and to the question of the bombing of Auschwitz-Birkenau in the contexts of their understanding of the war, their national interests, and the differing time frames of the Shoah and World War II. Two questions are examined in depth: information about the Shoah vs. knowledge; and the willingness to try to do something about the murder of the Jews vs. the ability to do so. Dr. David Silberklang, Yad Vashem 10:00-10:30 Break

10:30-12:00 The Holocaust and Art This presentation will introduce the participant to artists who created works of art during and after the Holocaust including Felix Nussbaum, Bedrich Fritta, and Charlotte Salomon. How do we engage our students by using this type of visual media? Dr. Rachel Perry, Tel Aviv University 12:00-13:00 Lunch Break discussion time for educational projects with Yad Vashem staff 13:00-14:30 How Was It Humanly Possible? - An educational unit on the perpetrators strategies for teaching this in the classroom This educational unit deals with the question of the nature of the perpetrators. It begins in the 1930's with the rise of the Nazis to power and takes us to the German Police units (ORPO) that were involved in murdering Jews on the Eastern Front after 1941. The unit follows a deportation train from Düsseldorf to Riga as recounted by a German policeman and a Jewish survivor of that same transport. The unit includes an overview of two death camps and their commanders. The end of the unit explores the "other" side -- the Righteous Among the Nations -- non-jews that risked their lives to save Jews. This unit is interdisciplinary and combines history, literature, and testimonies. Nurit Davidson, Yad Vashem 14:30-15:00 Break 15:00-16:00 Auschwitz Death Camp and the Sonderkommando This educational unit deals with a unique document that portrays the story of one transport that arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau on May 26, 1944. The unit introduces the teacher to the use of photographs as historical documents that, together with additional sources such as letters and testimonies, help create a comprehensive view of a certain historical event. Dr. Gideon Greif, "Shem Olam" Faith and the Holocaust Institute, Israel 16:00-16:30 Break 16:30-17:30 Freida Klieger - Testimony from Auschwitz 17:30 Return to the Hotel ** The Historical Museum will be open until 20:00. Transportation can be arranged**

Friday, January 9, 2015 08:30-10:00 The Impact of the Holocaust on Jewish-Christian Relations This presentation will review post-world War II developments in Jewish-Christian relations as evidenced by key documents such as Nostre Aetate and Dabru Emet. It will examine the continuing controversy over the role of Pope Pius XII as a source of tension in Jewish-Christian relations. It will highlight the theological insights and new lines of inquiry that have emerged over the past several decades as a result of Jewish-Christian dialogue. Dr. Gemma Del Duca, Seton Hill University 10:00-10:30 Break 10:30-12:00 Return to Life - Educational Unit The Holocaust survivors: from liberation to rehabilitation. Nurit Davidson, Yad Vashem 12:00 Return to the Hotel Saturday, January 10, 2015 The Dead Sea 09:00-17:00 A guided tour to Masada and the Dead Sea with Amir Golani This optional guided tour will take the participants to the 2nd Temple fortress of Masada, built by King Herod in the Judean Desert in the 1st cent. BCE. The participants will hear the story of the final battle with the Roman Legions as told by Josephus in the years 70-74 CE. After this there will be time to swim/float in the Dead Sea and enjoy all the medicinal treats connected with this unique place. Sunday, January 11, 2015 The North 07:30-20:00 Trip to the North with Amir Golani Our trip to the north will take us from Jerusalem to the east and down into the Jordan Valley. We will take a route that goes around the biblical city of Jericho and travel up the Jordan Valley rift to Beit Shean. Just north of Beit Shean, we will travel to the mountain called "the Star of the Jordan" where we will visit the Crusader castle Belvoir. We will explore the castle, built in the 12th century, and see the beautiful view to the east, north, and south. The mountains of Moav, Edom, the Gilad, and the Golan to

Mt. Hermon are all visible from this castle. From there we will visit Naharayim- and see a model of the original hydroelectric power station that was built there in the 1920's. We will experience the story of Kibbutz Gesher-- the pioneers that struggled to settle and cultivate the land and their fight for survival during the War of Independence in 1948. We will have lunch at the Kibbutz Ein Gev fish restaurant and then continue our tour along the Golan Heights. We will travel to Mt. Bental and see the border between Syria and Israel. We will wind up our tour with a stop at the DeKarina Chocolate Factory. From here we will return to Jerusalem and the Prima Kings hotel. Monday, January 12, 2015 09:00-11:00 Educational Group workshop with Yad Vashem pedagogical materials Yad Vashem staff 11:00-17:30 SELF DIRECTED DAY Participants can take advantage of, but are not limited to, the following options at Yad Vashem: 1) Pedagogical meetings with the staff members of the ISHS to help the participants prepare their educational project proposals 2) A visit to the exhibition- "I Am My Brother's Keeper - Marking 50 Years of Honoring Righteous Among the Nations" 3) Return visits to the new Holocaust History Museum, Art Museums, Visual Center & Reflections Center 17:30 Return to the Hotel Tuesday, January 13, 2015 08:30-10:00 Antisemitism and the Global Jihad What are the roots of Arab/Muslim Antisemitism in the 20th century? What is the attitude of Islam/ the Koran towards the Jews? What are the dangers of extreme Muslim fundamentalism for the western world in general and for the Jews specifically? Anti-Judaism, Antisemitism, and anti-zionism- are they connected? How can we combat this phenomenon? Prof. Raphael Israeli, Hebrew University 10:00-10:30 Break

10:30-12:00 The Problems Facing Israel Today What was the hope of the Oslo Accords in 1994 and why have they failed to produce a peace agreement between the PA and Israel? What transpired after Sept. 2000 and how has this affected Israel-- both politically and militarily? Where is the Israeli public today? Is there still hope that there can be peace between Israel and the Palestinians? Herb Keinon, Jerusalem Post 12:00-13:00 Lunch Break 13:00-14:00 The Righteous Among the Nations Saving Jews during the Holocaust using Echoes and Reflections Lesson #7 What is the definition of a "Righteous Among the Nations" according to Yad Vashem? What can we learn about ourselves from their behavior? This session will focus on the story of the Righteous community of Le Chambon Sur Lignon using historical background information, literature, film, and testimony. Stephanie McMahon-Kaye, Yad Vashem 14:00-15:00 Screening of a portion of the film Schindler s List We will watch the last 45 minutes of the Hollywood film, "Schindler's List." 15:00-16:00 Visit to the grave of Oscar Schindler We will travel to the Catholic cemetery on Mt. Zion in Jerusalem and visit the gravesite of Oskar Schindler together with two Schindler survivors - Nachum and Genya Manor. 16:00-17:00 Return to the Hotel and continuation of the testimony by Nachum and Genya 19:00 Farewell Dinner at La Boca in Jerusalem Wednesday, January 14, 2015 08:30-10:30 Confronting the Phenomenon of Holocaust Denial - a workshop How do we define "denial" of the Holocaust? Holocaust Revisionism, Relativism, and Reversal definitions? Is Holocaust denial a new form of Antisemitism? Who are the deniers? Are they historians? When did this phenomenon begin? From which countries does this emanate? What main issues do they raise? How can we combat this phenomenon? These are the educational challenges we face today, as educators. Ephraim Kaye, Yad Vashem

10:30-11:00 Break 11:00-12:30 Current Issues in Holocaust Education and Research: The Unprecedentedness of the Holocaust in an Age of Genocide What are the parameters that make the Holocaust an unprecedented historical event? What are the parallels between the Holocaust and other genocides of the 20th century Armenia, Darfur, Rwanda? How can we incorporate the study of genocide into our curricula in order to make the study of the Holocaust more relevant? Prof. Yehuda Bauer, Yad Vashem 12:30-13:30 Lunch Break 13:30-15:00 Prosecuting Nazi War Criminals Today Why is it important to bring Nazi war criminals to justice today --60 years later? Why and how did so many escape justice in the aftermath of WWII? Examples of cases in process in different countries. What can we do to make sure that justice is done? Dr. Efraim Zuroff, Simon Wiesenthal Center, Jerusalem 15:00-15:30 Break 15:30-17:00 Seminar Evaluation and where do we go from here? 17:00 Return to the Hotel