Adobe Awards Remember.org for Social Change in Media for:
The 360 0 Virtual
Tour of Auschwitz and Birkenau by Alan Jacobs and Krysia Jacobs, and the Museum at Auschwitz
Nordhausen Liberation Photos by VII Corps Soldier
Special Links: Check out the USC Shoah Foundation Institute, launching a new online exhibit, called Stories of Liberation. It features testimony clips from both survivors and liberators who discuss their perspective of the Allied liberation of Nazi camps.
Also the Zachor Holocaust Remembrance Foundation shared special pins for Holocaust Remembrance, learn more here.
Auschwitz Museum Launches in English and Polish versions,
with photography provided by Remember.org artist Alan Jacobs.
Geoffrey Laurence presents powerful art and
soon video on the Holocaust. Some teachers have asked us not to recommend viewing this if you are under 18.
It
is one of our most powerful and popular exhibits.
Geoffrey
Laurence: The Holocaust Series
- Art: "To find a lexicon that for me has truth and, above
all meaning, in relation to this historical tragedy continues to be
my utmost desire. It is a journey through a dark landscape that I
am still traveling."
-
- Project with Auschwitz Museum: Now you can see the
camp like you were there today, in 360 degree views.
- Discussion
Group of Survivors and Descendants; visit AllGenerations.org
- Survivor Tamara
Deuel's paintings, we miss her.
Remember.org shares art, discussion,
photos, poems, and facts
to preserve powerful memories, like A Survivor's
Prayer to millions of visitors since 1994.
Education: History,
Lesson Plans, and Resources
Learn the facts through lesson
plans, research and timelines,
including our Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust.
Books by Survivors
Listen to survivors through books. Including Abe's Story, The Last Sunrise, Jan Karski and Courage Under Siege and many others with extensive excerpts and photos available online.
Also Childhood in Times of War, a new book online,
Someone is Watching Over Me by Florence Mayer Lieblich, and Anne Frank: The Biography and Official Secrets: What the Nazis Planned, What the British and Americans Knew.
Visit the Bookstore
and find over 2,000 books on the Holocaust.
Witnesses
Survivors, rescuers, liberators,
and others share their stories. Complete online books include, The
Soapmaker, Childhood in Times of War
and more. Featuring liberator testimonies
and remembering the non-jewish
victims.
Remember Chuck Ferree? we do. Plus Analysis of The Limits of Forgiveness: 10 Essays
How to Find What You Are Looking For..
Check out our links pages.
Remember.org is organized into 2 sections: Research, areas where
you can explore the issues of the Holocaust, and Forums, where
discussion and ongoing feedback is held. To get started, visit our
Frequently Asked Questions page. |
Then and Now
Auschwitz, Then and Now shows you actual
art by survivors and more.
Click on the painting, and you'll see a photo taken in the same place
that art was created, years later. It's one of the most powerful exhibits
that lets you see Then,
and Now.
Auschwitz, 1979-81
Birkenau, 1996
Mauthausen, 1996.
The work of Alan Jacobs will continue to grow, sharing photos and views
on the Holocaust that are unique and powerful. Remember.org is grateful
for his excellent work shared with our visitors.
Art and Media
View paintings by survivor Jan Komski. His personal history is full of remarkable events, including being part of the very first prisoner transport to arrive in Auschwitz, and being part of one of the most famous escapes from the camp. Check out Voices of Shoah now, an audio documentary narrated by Elliot Gould.
The following is a series of concentration camp photos taken by Josh C. Each custom welded steel frame implements various objects
or modifications which provide additional impact to its respective photograph. The series had a successful exhibit at Northern Arizona University at the Martin-Springer Institute for Teaching the Holocaust, Tolerance, and Humanitarian Values, and was hosted by
institute founder Doris Springer, a survivor of Auschwitz concentration camp.
The "graphic" images/descriptions may not be suitable for younger viewers.
Keep Asking questions at the Imagine Art Gallery, an online forum for students who are learning about the Holocaust. Read the poems, view the paintings by sixth graders online, and remember.
Looking
for People lost in the Holocaust?
Discover Tracing Families, a new section attempting to help the many who suspect that, despite the passage of so many years since World War II, someone may still exist somewhere "out there".
Ask your questions at our Discussion Boards |