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Chapman To Present Holocaust Lecture Series

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  • Chapman To Present Holocaust Lecture Series

    CHAPMAN TO PRESENT HOLOCAUST LECTURE SERIES

    Orange County Register, CA
    http://www.ocregister.com/news/holocaust-lecture- free-1816336-hall-memorial
    Aug 21 2007

    The theme for the series is 'History as Witness to the Future.'

    THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

    ORANGE Chapman University's annual Holocaust Lecture Series, presented
    by the school's Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education, will focus
    this year on the preservation of memories as a crucial component of
    historical witness.

    Under the theme "Saving Memories: History As Witness to the Future,"
    speakers will cover such varied topics as the remembering the Armenian
    genocide, preservation of cultural memories in rescued Yiddish books,
    and filmed memories.

    The year will culminate with an event focusing on the passing of
    memories to a new generation (the annual Holocaust Art and Writing
    Contest, involving hundreds of high school and middle school students)
    and Chapman's annual Evening of Holocaust Remembrance ceremony.

    All events are free of charge and open to the public.

    Call 714-628-7377 or go to www.chapman.edu/holocausteducation for
    more information.

    The events:

    Aug. 29 at 7 p.m. -"Buchenwald and Beyond: One Boy's Story of Humanity
    and Hope," lecture by Robert Waisman, teen survivor of the Buchenwald
    concentration camp and today a retired businessman. Also features
    a screening of the award-winning documentary film "The Boys of
    Buchenwald." Memorial Hall, Chapman University, Orange. Admission:
    free, by ticket only (this is an event aimed at Chapman students,
    and any remaining tickets will be available to the public on the day
    of the lecture at the Will Call table, starting at 6:15 p.m.)

    Sept. 25 at 7 p.m.- "Must We Still Remember? The Armenian Genocide
    as Prototype," lecture by Dr. Richard G. Hovannisian, professor
    of Armenian and Near Eastern history and holder of the Armenian
    Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at UCLA. Bush
    Conference Center, 404 Beckman Hall. Admission: free.

    Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. - "Don't You Know That Yiddish is Dead? How the
    Last-Minute Rescue of Yiddish Books is Breathing New Life into Modern
    Jewish Culture," lecture by Aaron Lansky, founder and president of
    the National Yiddish Book Center, MacArthur Fellow and author of
    Outwitting History: The Amazing Adventures of a Man Who Rescued a
    Million Yiddish Books. Memorial Hall. Admission: free

    Nov. 13 at 7 p.m. -"They Were My Neighbors: Jewish Survivors and Their
    Rescuers in the Holocaust," lecture by Douglas Greenberg, professor
    of history and executive director of the Shoah Foundation Institute
    for Visual History and Education at USC. Memorial Hall.

    Admission: free

    Feb. 12 at 7 p.m.- Screening of the documentary Swimming in Auschwitz,
    followed by conversation with writer/director/producer Jon Kean and
    Auschwitz survivor Renee Firestone. Memorial Hall.

    Admission: free.

    March 7 at 11 a.m. -Awards Ceremony: The Ninth Annual Holocaust
    Art and Writing Contest. Hundreds of Southern California middle and
    high school students and their teachers and parents gather at the
    culmination of the annual student writing and art contest presented
    by Chapman's Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education in partnership
    with The "1939" Club. Following the awards presentation, participants
    have the opportunity to meet and converse with Holocaust survivors.

    Memorial Hall. Admission: free (public seating extremely limited).

    April 29 at 7 p.m. -An Evening of Holocaust Remembrance. Solemn
    commemoration in music and words, remembering the victims of the
    Holocaust, including a candle-lighting ceremony representing the
    Chapman community's commitment to remembrance and to witness.

    Memorial Hall. Admission: free.

    The Jerry and Sally Schwartz Holocaust Lecture Series is funded by
    the Jerry and Sally Schwartz Holocaust Education Fund, managed by
    the Community Foundation of the Jewish Federation of Orange County,
    in cooperation with the Jewish Community Center of Orange County.

    The "1939" Club Lecture Series is made possible by The "1939" Club,
    a Holocaust survivor organization. The "1939" Club's Leopold Page
    Memorial Righteous Rescuers Lecture Series is funded by a grant from
    Steven Spielberg's Righteous Persons Foundation; Mr. Page, number 173
    on Schindler's "List," was a founding member and president of The
    "1939" Club, one of the largest and most active Holocaust survivor
    organizations in the United States.

    The Stan Ross Visiting Scholar in Holocaust History is made possible
    by a gift from Stan Ross.
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