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Vanderbilt's Holocaust Lecture Series marks 30th year

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  • Vanderbilt's Holocaust Lecture Series marks 30th year

    Vanderbilt University News, TN

    News from Vanderbilt University

    Vanderbilt's Holocaust Lecture Series marks 30th year;
    2007 theme is 'Broken Silence'

    9-20-2007

    The longest running Holocaust Lecture Series at an American university
    marks its 30th year with lectures and films this October and November
    spanning subjects from the life of children in Nazi Germany to
    genocide in Iraq and ethnic cleansing in the United States.

    `The theme of `Broken Silence' for this year's series reaffirms our
    long-standing commitment to expand the frontiers of our conversation
    about the Holocaust and other genocides by providing a stage for new
    perspectives, new questions and for conveying those narratives that
    have struggled to find a voice or an audience,' said the co-chairs of
    the planning committee for the series, Shaiya Baer and Irek
    Kusmierczyk. `Hence, in these lectures, we will listen to the voices
    of victimized Jews as well as Kurds and Armenians, and, in the
    process, we find the courage to confront the question of racial
    cleansing on American soil.'

    The schedule of events, all free and open to the public:



    7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 14, in Sarratt Cinema `The Skeleton in Our Closet:
    Misremembering America's Racial Cleansings' Journalist Elliot Jaspin,
    a Pulitzer Prize winner, speaks about episodes in America after
    Reconstruction until the Great Depression where organized groups of
    white people terrorized, murdered and forced thousands of black
    Americans to flee their homes. Jaspin is the author of Buried in
    Bitter Waters: The Hidden History of Racial Cleansing in America.


    7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 17, in the Moore Room of Vanderbilt Law School
    `The Iraq Genocide: Personal Perspectives and Legal Residue' Michael
    Newton, acting associate professor of clinical law, was in Kurdish
    camps as citizens fled to the mountains in 1991 amongst the
    destruction of villages by Saddam Hussein. Newton will discuss the
    political and legal salience of the subsequent Iraqi High Tribunal,
    where he served as an international law adviser to the judges. He will
    highlight the perspective of the victims in the context of Iraqi
    society.


    7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 28, in The Ben Schulman Center for Jewish Life
    `Deep Evil and Deep Good: The Concept of Human Nature Confronts the
    Holocaust' Michael Bess, the Chancellor's Professor of History, speaks
    about the sometimes atrocious and sometimes noble actions of Europeans
    touched by the persecution of Jews by Nazi Germany. He will examine
    the strategies that have been followed by historians, psychologists,
    social scientists and philosophers to explain the chasm between those
    who tried to help and those who took part in the persecution.


    7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 1, in Flynn Auditorium of Vanderbilt Law School
    `Children of Hitler's War' Nicholas Stargardt, a fellow at Magdalen
    College, Oxford, discusses the role of children under Nazi Germany
    rule. He is the author of Witnesses of War: Children's Lives under the
    Nazis.


    7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 5, in 103 Wilson Hall `The Years of Extermination:
    An Integrated History of the Holocaust' Saul Friedländer, holder of
    the 1939 Club Chair at the University of California, Los Angeles, says
    he `will argue for an essential need to integrate the fate of
    individuals, both Jews and non-Jews alike, within the general history
    of the Holocaust.' Friedländer is the author of Nazi Germany and
    the Jews, 1939-1945: The Years of Extermination.


    6 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15, in 126 Wilson Hall `The Armenian Genocide'
    Andrew Goldberg directed and produced this one-hour documentary about
    the first genocide of the 20th century, when more than a million
    Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks in 1915. The film will be
    followed by a 7 p.m. reception in the lobby of Wilson Hall, and then a
    7:35 p.m. lecture by Peter Balakian on `The Transmission of Trauma
    Across Generations: Writing a Memoir about Growing Up in the Suburbs
    and the Armenian Genocide.'

    Selected events will be recorded and posted as podcasts to VUCast, the
    Web site of Vanderbilt News Service, at www.vanderbilt.edu/news.

    The Vanderbilt University Holocaust Lecture Series was started in 1977
    by Beverly Asbury, the university chaplain.

    Media Contact: Jim Patterson, (615) 322-NEWS
    [email protected]
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