Mon, Apr 21
06:30PM
Mon, Apr 21
06:30PM

lecture

Anne Frank   s Diary  The Making of an Urtext of the Holocaust - In-Person Program

Anne Frank’s Diary: The Making of an Urtext of the Holocaust - In-Person Program

Historian Raphael Gross, Director of the German Historical Museum and editor of a history of the worldwide reception of Anne Frank’s diaries, discusses the making of and response to a unique document in literary history. Neither a true diary that chronologically records the daily life and thoughts of its author, nor a work of fiction, the Diary of a Young Girl is an unfinished manuscript.

Adapted from diary entries in multiple stages by the young author herself – and posthumously by her father – it made Anne Frank into perhaps the most famous German- Jewish writer of the 20th century. Today, it is an unparalleled urtext of the Holocaust.

Against this background, the lecture will focus on the worldwide reception of the diary over almost eight decades. How was the edition of the text authorized by Otto Frank received in countries as diverse as Holland, Israel, the USA, Japan, Hungary, Spain, and the GDR? Which aspects of her notes were included? Which faded into the background? And what did the icon “Anne Frank” stand for in all these contexts?

This event will take place in person at the Center for Jewish History and will be followed by a reception. If you are unable to attend in person, the event will be recorded and uploaded to YouTube.

Part of the Center’s programming series Anne Frank in History and Memory in connection with Anne Frank The Exhibition. Purchase your tickets to the exhibition here.

About the Speaker
Raphael Gross is the President of the Foundation Deutsches Historisches Museum in Berlin.

Before assuming the role in 2017, he served as the Director of the Simon Dubnow Institute for Jewish History and Culture and held the Chair of Jewish History and Culture at the University of Leipzig. Previously, he headed the Jüdisches Museum Frankfurt am Main, (2006-2015); the Fritz Bauer Institute, Frankfurt am Main, (2007-2015); and the Leo Baeck Institute, London, (2001-2015); as director.

Raphael Gross is a historian and the author and editor of numerous books on German-Jewish history and the Holocaust. Many of the exhibitions he initiated explore these and related topics.

In May 2023 Raphael Gross was mandated to evaluate the provenance research of the Foundation E. G. Bührle in Switzerland. He presented his report to the public in June 2024.

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lecture

Wed, Apr 23
06:30PM
Wed, Apr 23
06:30PM

lecture

Leo Baeck Memorial Panel: LBI at 70 - In-Person Program

About the Lecture
Bridging Generations, Disciplines, and the Atlantic: LBI at 70

As they began their salvage of the material and intellectual legacy of European Jewry, the Leo Baeck Institute's founders hoped to assemble a narrative of the German-Jewish past that was comprehensive, synthetic, and "free from apologetic or tendentious coloring." Today, the collections of the LBI inform a corpus of scholarship that surely surpassed the founders' wildest expectations in scope, but whose "coloring" has also changed as much as society and the academy. The 66th Leo Baeck Memorial Lecture will assemble a panel of scholars to discuss the evolution of the field of German-Jewish history over seven decades and its prospects for the future. At the center of their discussion will be the LBI as an institution that has both shaped and been shaped by the many turns of intellectual history. Featuring Michael Brenner (American University / University of Munich), Elisheva Carlebach(Columbia), Raphael Gross (German Historical Museum, Berlin), Marion Kaplan (NYU), and Helmut Walser-Smith (Vanderbilt).

After the lecture, visitors will have the opportunity to view LBI's anniversary exhibit, 70 Years of LBI: Bridging Generations.

This event will take place in-person at the Center for Jewish History and will be followed by a reception.

The Leo Baeck Memorial Lecture is endowed by Marianne C. Dreyfus and Family, the descendants of Rabbi Leo Baeck

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lecture

Thu, Apr 24
12:30PM
Thu, Apr 24
12:30PM

conversation

At Lunch with Lawrence Bacow     Live on Zoom

At Lunch with Lawrence Bacow – Live on Zoom

Julie Salamon (New York Times best-selling author) sits down with retired Harvard President Lawrence Bacow.  Lawrence S. Bacow served as the 29th President of Harvard University from 2018 until 2023. Widely recognized as one of higher education’s most respected leaders, Bacow’s tenure at Harvard was marked by the creation of a range of academic initiatives, advocacy for public service and immigration, diversity and access to opportunity, and steady leadership of the university through the COVID-19 pandemic.  From 2011 to 2014, he served as President- in-Residence in the Higher Education Program at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education. From 2014 to 2018, he served as the Hauser Leader-in-Residence at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government’s Center for Public Leadership.  Prior to joining Harvard, Bacow was President of Tufts University from 2001 to 2011. During his tenure, he advanced the university’s commitment to excellence in teaching, research, and public service and fostered collaboration across the university’s eight schools.  Before his time at Tufts, Bacow spent 24 years on the faculty of the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he held the Lee and Geraldine Martin Professorship of Environmental Studies.  Interested in math and science from an early age, Bacow attended college at MIT, where he received his S.B. in economics in three years and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He went on to earn three degrees from Harvard: a J.D. from Harvard Law School, an M.P.P. from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, and a Ph.D. in public policy from the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Ticket Info: Free; register online for a Zoom link


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conversation

Thu, Apr 24
01:00PM
Thu, Apr 24
01:00PM

lecture

The YIVO Sound Archive and the Klezmer Revival – Live on Zoom

YIVO sound archivist Eléonore Biezunski will tell the story of the Max and Frieda Weinstein Archive of YIVO Sound Recordings in relation to the revitalization of klezmer music since the mid-1970s. The impetus of young folk musicians seeking to reclaim the music of their ancestors, particularly the instrumental genre known as klezmer music, in a general context of “roots movement,” was a major factor in the establishment of the YIVO Sound Archive in the early 1980s. As a sound archivist and Yiddish musician, Biezunski presents the archive not only as a repository of documents, possible sources, but also as a living space – a historical phenomenon in its own right and a dynamic spatialized territory generated by individuals with their own creativity, caught in a web of social and cultural, intellectual and scientific, institutional and artistic contexts.

This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

Ticket Info: Free; registration is required.


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lecture

Thu, Apr 24
07:30PM
Thu, Apr 24
07:30PM

panel discussion

Generation to Generation  Honoring the Past  Shaping the Future     In-Person Program

Generation to Generation: Honoring the Past, Shaping the Future – In-Person Program

Join us on Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) for an evening of memory, resilience, and testimony. The event aims to explore how Holocaust memory is transmitted and transformed across generations, and how it continues to shape Jewish identity today. We're excited to welcome Jerry Lindenstraus as our keynote speaker, a firsthand survivor of Kristallnacht who escaped the war and made his way to the US after spending seven years as a refugee in hiding in Shanghai. Jerry's story is preceded by Alison Berg, the granddaughter of two Hungarian Holocaust survivors, who has dedicated much of her life to sharing her family's story as a means of fostering justice and tolerance. The program will culminate in a panel discussion and audience Q&A featuring Jerry, Alison, and another member of one of their families representing second generation testimony.

This gathering is more than a remembrance—it is a call to listen, to learn, and to carry forward the voices of those who endured. The program will run for approximately 75 minutes.

Part of the Center’s programming series Anne Frank in History and Memory in connection with Anne Frank The Exhibition.

Thank you to Ancestry, the Center for Jewish History’s Family History sponsor

About the Speakers
Alison Berg is the maternal granddaughter of two Hungarian Holocaust survivors, Anna and Eugene Greenwood. Her close relationship to her grandmother inspired a deep, lifetime involvement in the Jewish philanthropic community, including mentoring teens on incorporating Judaism into their daily lives, serving on the board of a youth philanthropy program, and participating in a service trip to Nicaragua. She is also a Big Sister with Big Brothers Big Sisters New York City. Alison joined WEDU in 2019 after her grandmother’s passing to continue to share the stories and lessons so critical to her own understanding of justice and tolerance. Alison graduated from the University of Michigan with degrees in Communications and Political Science and works as the Associate Director of Communications for the NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business.

Gerald “Jerry” Lindenstraus 
Born in Germany in 1929, Jerry witnessed the horrors of Kristallnacht before fleeing with his family to Shanghai, where he spent seven years as a refugee. His journey took him across continents—from war-torn Europe to Colombia and ultimately to New York, where he has dedicated his life to ensuring that the lessons of the Holocaust are never forgotten.

Ticket Info: Pay what you wish; click here to register


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panel discussion

Sun, Apr 27
02:00PM
Sun, Apr 27
02:00PM

lecture

AI in Genealogy  Practical Applications and Limitations for Family Research      In-Person Lecture   Live on Zoom

AI in Genealogy: Practical Applications and Limitations for Family Research – In-Person Lecture & Live on Zoom

This presentation explores the practical applications and current limitations of artificial intelligence in genealogical research. Drawing from his experience, Steve Little will demonstrate real-world AI applications, including a specialized tool he's collaboratively developing that analyzes cemetery headstones - extracting and translating text, describing symbols, and providing cultural context particularly relevant for Jewish genealogy. The session will cover how AI can assist with tasks like document transcription, data organization, and project management, while also discussing important limitations such as research verification and translation reliability. Attendees will receive an overview of major AI platforms and their specific strengths, concluding with guidance on finding reliable resources for continued learning in this rapidly evolving field.

With the support of the Lucille Gudis Memorial Fund for Jewish Genealogy of the JGSNY

Thank you to Ancestry, the Center for Jewish History’s Family History sponsor

About the Speaker:
Steve Little serves as AI Program Director for the National Genealogical Society and founded AI Genealogy Insights, where he explores the integration of artificial intelligence into genealogical research. His background uniquely combines graduate work in computational linguistics with years of experience building information systems for libraries and archives. As co-host of The Family History AI Show podcast, he helps researchers understand both the possibilities and limitations of AI in family history research. His work focuses particularly on using technology to understand complex genealogical relationships, including endogamy and pedigree collapse.

Ticket Info:
In person: $5 general admission; free for JGSNY and CJH members; click here to register
Zoom: Pay what you wish; click here to register.


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lecture

Tue, Apr 29
02:00PM
Tue, Apr 29
02:00PM

lecture

Anne   s Ancestors - Live on Zoom

Anne’s Ancestors - Live on Zoom

To understand Anne Frank’s family, identified widely as a Frankfurt family that fled to Amsterdam in the 1930s, one needs a more detailed study of Anne’s “annecestors” who lived throughout Germany in prior centuries. In this talk, Karen S. Franklin delves into this history. The shocking discovery of the fate of Anne’s forebears some 600 years before she was murdered casts her fate in the larger context of Jewish historical experience.

The talk takes place in conjunction with Anne Frank The Exhibition at the Center for Jewish History.

This event will take place online. In case you are not able to attend the live meeting, the event will be recorded and posted on YouTube.

Karen S. Franklin is Director of Family Research at the Leo Baeck Institute, a position she has held for over 30 years. She has served as chair of the Council of American Jewish Museums, chair of ICMEMO, the Memorial Museums Committee of the International Council of Museums (ICOM), president of the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies (IAJGS), and as co-chair of the Board of Governors of JewishGen. In 2019 she received the Lifetime Achievement Award of IAJGS.

In 2012, she received a Service Citation from ICOM-US, the national committee of the ICOM, for her work in Nazi-era looted art restitution.

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lecture

Tue, Apr 29
06:30PM
Tue, Apr 29
06:30PM

lecture

Jews and the KKK  Antisemitism  Vigilantism  and Resistance     Live on Zoom

Jews and the KKK: Antisemitism, Vigilantism, and Resistance – Live on Zoom

Join AJHS and Andrew Sperling, Leon Levy Fellow at CJH, for an online lecture. Since its revival in 1915, the Ku Klux Klan has targeted Jewish Americans and others through violence, harassment, and propaganda. The continuous presence of a hostile hate group has prompted Jews to ask several questions: how can the Klan be defeated, and what is the Jewish role in that process? This program offers a history of Jewish encounters with the Klan in every region of the U.S., between its popular peak in the 1920s and its resurgence under the White Power movement of the 1980s. Highlighting moments of antisemitic terrorism and anti-Klan resistance, Andrew Sperling reflects on the legacy and lessons of this historical struggle.

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lecture

Tue, Apr 29
07:00PM
Tue, Apr 29
07:00PM

book talk

Warsaw Testament by Rokhl Auerbach – In-person Event & Live on Zoom

Born in Lanowitz, a small village in rural Podolia, Rokhl Auerbach was a journalist, literary critic, memoirist, and a member of the Warsaw Yiddish literary community before the Holocaust. Upon the German invasion and occupation of Poland in 1939, she was tasked by historian and social activist Emanuel Ringelblum to run a soup kitchen for the starving inhabitants of the Warsaw Ghetto and later to join his top-secret ghetto archive, the Oyneg Shabes. One of only three surviving members of the archive project, Auerbach’s wartime and postwar writings became a crucial source of information for historians of both prewar Jewish Warsaw and the Warsaw Ghetto. After immigrating to Israel in 1950, she founded the witness testimony division at Yad Vashem and played a key role in the development of Holocaust remembrance.

Join us for a lecture by historian Samuel Kassow about Auerbach’s memoir, Warsaw Testament, which paints a vivid portrait of the city’s prewar Yiddish literary and artistic community and of its destruction at the hands of the Nazis. 

Buy Warsaw Testament, translated by Samuel Kassow.

Buy Who Will Write Our History?: Rediscovering a Hidden Archive from the Warsaw Ghetto.

This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

Ticket Info: Free; registration is required


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book talk

Sun, May 04
03:00PM
Sun, May 04
03:00PM

book talk

The Jews  5 000 Years and Counting     In-Person Program

The Jews: 5,000 Years and Counting – In-Person Program

Join author Rob Kutner and moderator Dan Friedman, former executive editor of the Forward, for a talk on Rob’s new book, The Jews: 5,000 Years and Counting, whichis packed with Jew-facts, Jew-figures, and the original, never-before-seen documents from those who lived through Jewish history. Read the transcript of the Biblical Patriarchs’ and Matriarchs’ Group Therapy Session! Sneak a peek at Moses’ Secret Diary or check out the awkward “I’m dumping you” text chain from Spain to the Jews in 1492! Collect and trade Rabbi Action Cards!

Covering every major moment in Jewish history from the literal “Beginning” to Tuesday’s rerun of Seinfeld, this book will make you laugh. It might inadvertently make you learn. If you’re Jewish, it will unquestionably give you something to kvetch about.

The book will be available for sale and signing from 2:00 – 5:00 pm.

About the Speakers
Dan Friedman is the former executive editor of the Forward and the author of an ebook about Tears for Fears, the 80s rock band. He is an editor, writing coach, and communications consultant. He has a PhD from Yale and writes a monthly column about SF, as well as about books, whisky, and the dangers of online hate for a variety of publications. Subscribe to his newsletter.

Rob Kutner is an Emmy-winning TV comedy writer (The Daily Show, CONAN) and bestselling author (Apocalypse How: Turn the End Times into the Best of Times, Look out for the Little Guy). He was once named a SuperJew by TimeOut New York

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book talk

Mon, May 05
06:30PM
Mon, May 05
06:30PM

discussion

Person Place Thing with Jonathan Brent     In-person Event  amp  Live on Zoom

Person Place Thing with Jonathan Brent – In-person Event & Live on Zoom

Join YIVO for a recording of the public radio show, Person Place Thing, with YIVO Executive Director Jonathan Brent. Hosted by humorist Randy CohenPerson Place Thing is an interview show based on the idea that people are especially engaging when they speak, not directly about themselves, but something they care about. Guests talk about one person, one place, and one thing with particular meaning to them.

The conversation will consist of Brent and Cohen discussing three different objects from the YIVO Archives and Library. YIVO’s collections contain 24 million items and 400,000 books, offering insight into centuries of Jewish history. Brent and Cohen will cover topics such as the Holocaust, American antisemitism during the interwar period, and more. Jardena Gertler-Jaffe and Bethany Pietroniro will play selections of music found in YIVO’s collections throughout the event.

This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

Ticket Info: $15; YIVO members & students: $10


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discussion

Wed, May 07
01:00PM
Wed, May 07
01:00PM

lecture

The Making of a Historian of East European Jewry and the Holocaust: Lucy S. Dawidowicz and the YIVO in Vilna, New York, and Offenbach – Live on Zoom

This talk by Nancy Sinkoff will explore the influence of the YIVO on Lucy S. Dawidowicz (1915-1990), a postwar American Jewish public intellectual and historian, who was central to the field that is now called “Holocaust Studies.” Witness to the vital Jewish world of pre-war Vilna, shaped by the group of refugee and survivor historians at the New York YIVO during the war, and an activist working with Jewish DPs and salvaging Jewish cultural treasures in Germany after the war, Dawidowicz played a principal role in the construction of postwar American Holocaust consciousness. With The Golden Tradition: Jewish Life and Thought in Eastern Europe (1967) and The War Against the Jews: 1933–1945 (1975), a classic of “intentionalist” Holocaust historiography that emphasized the centrality of Hitler’s antisemitic ideology to the Nazis’ “Final Solution,” Dawidowicz became a central authority on East European Jewry, the Holocaust, and antisemitism in the postwar years.

Buy Nancy Sinkoff’s book about Lucy S. Dawidowicz.

This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

Ticket Info: Free; registration is required.


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lecture

Thu, May 08
01:00PM
Thu, May 08
01:00PM

lecture

Immigrant Jewish Musicians and New York Mutual Aid Societies, 1920s-1960s – Live on Zoom

As hundreds of thousands of Jewish immigrants arrived in New York City in the early twentieth century, they formed mutual aid societies, labor unions, political and cultural clubs to find stability and solidarity. Known as landsmanshaftn, many of these societies were formed around the towns that the immigrants were from, e.g. the Kolomear Friends Association, the Independent Bialystoker Brotherly Love Association No. 1, the Krementchuger Ladies Benevolent Association, and so on. Offering burial services, sick benefits, emergency loans; landsmanshaftn also organized attendance at funerals, marriages, and bar mitzvahs of members, and held regular social events. The most elaborate events were Installation Banquets for new leadership and Anniversary Banquets, which were typically held every five years from the founding of the organization. They also held dances, masked balls, charity banquets for overseas causes, cultural nights, and Purim balls, among others.

Nearly all of these events involved the hiring of a Jewish orchestra to perform live at the event. They played marches and anthems during ceremonial functions, classical or Yiddish theatre compositions for listening, and Jewish and popular American music for dancing. The musicians they hired were almost exclusively Jewish and were often, but not always, klezmer orchestras. If the landsmanshaft had a bandleader among its members, his orchestra was generally hired for everything. Otherwise, they would hire popular New York klezmer musicians like Naftule Brandwein, Dave Tarras, or Shloimke Beckerman.

In this lecture, Dan Carkner will give an overview of the relationships between immigrant Jewish musicians and Jewish mutual aid societies in New York City from the 1910s to the 1960s. It will examine how these societies recreated aspects of the traditional musical culture of their hometowns back in Eastern Europe with a turn over time to modern American practices.

About the Speaker
Dan Carkner is a historian and library technician from Vancouver, Canada. He has a BA in History from Simon Fraser University (2017) and an MA in History from the University of British Columbia (2020). His current research interests relate to immigrant klezmer musicians in New York from the 1890s to 1920s, including their biographies and family histories, their professional relationships, and their efforts to copyright their compositions with the U.S. Library of Congress during the interwar years. He was a Music Editorial Board member of the Klezmer Institute's Scholarly Editions Project (2023–24) and an active volunteer for the Institute's Kisegof-Makonovetsky Digital Manuscript Project (KMDMP). He is a member of the board at the Peretz Centre for Secular Jewish Culture in Vancouver and works at the Centre for Postsecondary Accessible Resources BC (CAPER-BC) in Vancouver.

Ticket Info: Free; registration is required.


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lecture

Sun, May 18
10:00AM
Sun, May 18
10:00AM

symposium

The End of an Era  Jews and Elite Universities     In-Person Program and Live on Zoom

The End of an Era? Jews and Elite Universities – In-Person Program and Live on Zoom

This program gathers a remarkable group of scholars, writers, and thinkers for a day of urgently needed discussion about the recent surge of antisemitism on American college campuses. Focusing on the turmoil at Harvard University, Columbia University, and other elite bastions of higher education, the panelists will explore the complex history of Jews and American universities, analyze the factors contributing to the current crisis, and venture solutions for the future. The symposium is the latest event sponsored by the Center for Jewish History’s Jewish Public History Forum.

Ticket Info:
In person: $18 general admission; $11 CJH members; click here to register
Zoom: Pay what you wish; click here to register


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symposium

Thu, Jun 05
01:00PM
Thu, Jun 05
01:00PM

book talk

The New Jewish School in Music (1908-1938) as Part of the Jewish Cultural Renaissance – Live on Zoom

The history of the “New Jewish School of Music” began when several music students from the St. Petersburg Conservatory founded the Society for Jewish Folk Music in St. Petersburg in 1908. The end of this movement came with the 1938 invasion of Austria by Germany and the dissolution of the Viennese Society for the Promotion of Jewish Music that same year. The fascinating and dramatic history of the New Jewish School is the subject of From St. Petersburg to Vienna: The New Jewish School in Music (1908-1938) As Part of the Jewish Cultural Renaissance by Jascha Nemtsov. While many other national "schools" of music—such as the Russian, Czech, and Hungarian—were able to develop freely and establish themselves in an environment of cultural transparency, the Jewish school was violently suppressed. From St. Petersburg to Vienna was first published in 2004 in German, focusing on the reconstruction of the Jewish school’s historical development in Russia and, after 1917, increasingly in other Eastern and Central European countries.

Join YIVO for a discussion with Nemtsov about this recently-revised and translated edition of the book, led by YIVO Director of Public Programs Alex Weiser.

This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.

Ticket Info: Free; registration is required


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