• Holocaust survivors walk the red carpet in Israel beauty pageant

    Their hair styled and make-up applied, a group of elderly women carefully take to a red carpet catwalk, waving, blowing kisses and posing for pictures to cheering crowds. Wearing dresses adorned with sashes, the women strut down the runway, at times assisted, for the fourth Holocaust survivors’ beauty pageant, a

  • Historian May Face Charges in Poland for Writing That Poles Killed Jews in World War II

    The prominent Polish-born American historian Jan Tomasz Gross, who revealed the crimes committed by Poles against the Jews during the Holocaust, is gearing up for a legal battle over the “historical truth” against Polish authorities who, it now turns out, are still considering putting him on trial for harming Poland’s

  • Yad Vashem Locks Horns With Israeli Lawmakers Over Jewish Holocaust Heroes

    The Ministerial Committee for Legislation will consider a bill Sunday that is the focus of a dispute between Yad Vashem and a group of Knesset members. The MKs want the Holocaust museum and memorial to give the same recognition to Jews who saved other Jews during the Holocaust as it

  • Alumni Reflection: No Limit to What We Can Do by Rachel Rothstein, 2016

    I am a very emotional person. Maybe it’s part of my personality or maybe it’s because I fall under the category of moody 17-year-old girl. I’m emotional when I get a bad mark. I’m emotional when I get in a fight with my friends. I’m emotional when I hear about

  • Looking for the light in the dark: A Holocaust survivor’s story

    Shimon Redlich, 81, sees his childhood through a complicated prism – through the interplay between Jewish, Ukrainian and Polish relations in wartime Brzezany. As a Jew who survived the Holocaust in the formerly Polish, now Ukrainian town, Redlich’s own memories can only provide the angle of the Jewish axis. But

  • Germany Confronts, in Unique Exhibit, Its ‘Holocaust of the Bullets’

    BERLIN — In this city laden with history, they were just two events recalling a heinous past: one, the opening of a public exhibition calling for a reckoning with a particularly brutal period of the Nazis’ rule; and the other, a modest remembrance of one Holocaust victim. Both channeled questions

  • Portraits Depicting Siblings of South Jersey Holocaust Survivors Part of Exhibit at Stockton

    Galloway, N.J. – Distant memories and faded photographs are now more vivid and permanent for seven South Jersey Holocaust survivors whose siblings, murdered by the Nazis, were artistically rendered as 5-foot charcoal portraits drawn by international artist Manfred Bockelmann. He drew the survivors’ siblings from photographs provided by the Sara and

  • The photo that alerted the world

    Dr Michael Siegel, an eminent 50-year-old German Jewish lawyer, is shown in the photo, bruised, barefoot, trousers ripped, being marched by Nazi ‘brown-shirt’ auxiliary police. The sign hanging from his neck was scrawled with the message, ‘Ich bin Jude, aber ich werde mich nie mehr bei der Polizei beschweren’ –

  • MOTL Australia: Feeling the Jewish Journey

    This is your / our time to shine and show how much this program means to us, our kids and our community! Just get on board and make a contribution. Every dollar counts. Let’s hit that $120,000 that will help fund future participants. Go to www.charidy.com/march

  • Stories from Holocaust prisoners forced to work in the gas chambers should be heard, not silenced

    On October 7 1944, a group of prisoners in Auschwitz-Birkenau took up tools and stones and attacked their SS guards. Some attempted to flee, others ran into a nearby building and set it on fire. Another section of their group stationed some half mile away killed a kapo, or prisoner-overseer,