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Israeli Historian Michman To Lecture Sept 17 At Clark University

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  • Israeli Historian Michman To Lecture Sept 17 At Clark University

    ISRAELI HISTORIAN MICHMAN TO LECTURE SEPT. 17, IN ROSE LIBRARY AT CLARK UNIVERSITY CAMPUS

    Targeted News Service
    September 9, 2008 Tuesday 1:52 AM EST

    The Clark University Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies will present "Jewish 'Headships' (Judenrate and
    Judenvereininungen): The Emergence and Application of an Administrative
    Concept in Nazi Anti-Jewish Policies," a talk by acclaimed scholar
    Dan Michman, at 4 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 17, in the Rose Library at
    the Cohen-Lasry House, 11 Hawthorne Street, Clark University Campus.

    Professor Michman will examine the historical development
    of administrative procedure by the Nazis as a means to better
    execute anti-Jewish policy in Nazi occupied territory during World
    War II. Michman will discuss the crucial role that constructed
    administrative concepts played in the organized effort to first
    exclude, and ultimately eradicate the Jewish people from European
    society.

    Michman is a Professor of Modern Jewish History and chair of the
    Finkler Institute of Holocaust Research at Bar-Ilan University
    in Israel. He is the chief historian for Yad Vashem, an Israeli
    organization dedicated to preserving and documenting the history of
    the Jewish people during the Holocaust period. Professor Michman was
    born in Amsterdam in 1947 and immigrated to Israel 10 years later
    when his father was appointed chairman of Yad Vashem.

    This event is free and open to the public. For more information,
    contact 508-793-8897.

    The mission of the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies is to educate undergraduate and graduate students
    about genocide and the Holocaust; to host a lecture series, free of
    charge and open to the public, to use scholarship to address current
    problems stemming from the murderous past; and to participate in
    public discussion about a host of issues ranging from the significance
    of state-sponsored denial of the Armenian genocide and well-funded
    denial of the Holocaust to intervention in and prevention of genocidal
    situations today.
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