Educational Tour to the Belzec Memorial Museum
The Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies in cooperation with the Belzec Memorial Museum and with financial support American Jewish Committee (AJC) and the Claims Conference organized an educational Seminar for Ukrainian students and teachers in Poland from the 15th of March until the 21st of March. The main aim of the project was the visit to one of the concentration camps, often left out of the “usual” Holocaust history trips to Poland. Belzec has opened the new memorial site and the museum at the place of the former concentration camp in June 2004.
Our seminar started in Lvov with an excursion to the Jewish parts of the city accompanied by two lectures about Jewish life before and during the Holocaust in Western Ukraine and a lecture about the perspectives of “Oral History” Method in Holocaust Research. Like an underscoring of our centres approaches for the remembrance of the Holocaust and a tolerant open minded society, we noticed plenty of Nazi propaganda sprayings and swastikas at former Jewish places, which reminded us once more of the importance of Holocaust education.
The next day we went by bus to Zamosc, a city in eastern Poland, which had a big Jewish population before the war. During the visit of the old town we got a good impression of how Jewish life had been before the Shoah. The lectures in Zamosc were mainly targeted to Jewish life in Poland. The history of the Jewish communities and the Polish – Jewish relations were used for an interesting comparison between Poland and Ukraine. Further more the collaboration of the local population in the Nazi Final Solution of the Jewish Question in both countries was discussed. The next four days our group moved to Belzec, a small city near the Ukrainian border. In March 1942 the installation of one of the Aktion "Reinhardt" death camps was finished in this small town located between Lublin and Lvov, two big centres of European Jewry. At least 500000 people were killed in this extermination camp until it’s destruction at the end of December 1942. Due to the Nazis efforts to erase evidence of the camp's existence near the war's end, almost all traces of the camp disappeared from the surface of the site. As already mentioned above, in June 2004 the new commemorations cite opened its doors. Our group was official guest at the Commemoration ceremony on the 19th of March. During these days in Belzec we as well visited the concentration camps Chelm, Sobibor and Lublin-Majdanek.
At the end I want to express my gratitude to all the people, who made this seminar a great success, particularly to Dr. Robert Kuwalek (director of the Belzec museum), Dr. Anatoly Podolsky (director of the Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies), our Ukrainian and Polish lecturers, our accountant Nele Yushchenko and our translator Constantin Radecky.
List of lecturers: Dr.Maxim Gon, Dr. Anatoly Podolsky, Olexandr Voitenko, Tatiana Velichko, Dr.Robert Kuwalek, Dr.Adam Kopciovski, Mikhail Tyaglyy, Tomasz Hanejko, Jaroslaw Joniec, Jacek Nowakowski, Zbigniew Paszt, Tomasz Kranz, Prof. Konrad Zielinski and Arthur Fredekind.
Announcements
MoreLatest News
-
XIV ALL-UKRAINIAN DRAGOMANOV READINGS
On 21 March 2025, the XIV Drahomanov Readings of Young Historians took place at the History Faculty of the Mykhailo Drahomanov National University of Ukraine.
[More] -
NGO “Mnemonic” presented an audio film about the Holocaust in Rivne
During the presentation of the audio film Echoes of Sosonky, created by the NGO Mnemonic, visitors heard the story of the tragic events that took place in Rivne in early November 1941. The project is supported by the EVZ Foundation.
[More] -
Interview with German national daily newspaper “Die Welt”
At the end of February 2025, the head of the UCHS, Anatolii Podolskyi, gave a lengthy interview to the well-known European, German newspaper Die Welt. The interview was conducted by Austrian journalist Stefan Schocher.
[More] -
“One Stone, One Life: 80 Stumbling Stones for Kyiv”. The Project Continues
The project One Stone, One Life: 80 Stumbling Stones for Kyiv was launched in 2021 and was dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the Babyn Yar tragedy. The project honours the memory of people whose fate was connected to Babyn Yar, i.e. those who were killed or persecuted by the Nazi regime from 1941 to 1943.
[More] -
Challenges in Holocaust Studies during the Russian War Against Ukraine. Open Lecture at Vinnytsia Pedagogical University
The NotBox educational and research hub of Mykhailo Kotsiubynskyi Vinnytsia State Pedagogical University recently hosted a guest lecture for students of the Faculty of History and International Relations. The lecture, titled Challenges in Holocaust Studies during the Russian War Against Ukraine, was led by the head of the Ukrainian Centre for Holocaust Studies Anatolii Podolskyi.
[More]