Updated June-August | Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum

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VIRTUAL PROGRAM GUIDE

JUNE-AUGUST 2020


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here is no denying that our world looks different now. We must weigh every decision we make more carefully than ever before. Something as simple as visiting a family member, a restaurant, or a Museum isn’t as easy as it used to be. These are uncertain times and things are changing. We are proud, however, to share that one thing that has stayed the same is our fervent desire to spread our mission. At the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum, our mission is to teach the history of the Holocaust and advance human rights to combat prejudice, hatred, and indifference. One of the ways we bring our mission to our community and beyond is through our programming. We are so proud of the work everyone at the Museum has done to continue to provide you with all the programs you’re used to and to also add events that help us reach an even wider audience. What makes us prouder still is that all these programs can be experienced safely and virtually from the comfort of your own home. The Museum may not be physically open and available to host programming, but thanks to today’s amazing technology, you can still interact with our mission in new and innovative ways. These past few months have been filled with hardships and uncertainties, but we are glad to be able to continue to offer you all you’ve come to expect from the Museum. Despite adversity, we have become stronger as a community within the Museum and beyond it. This strength comes not only from being able to continue to provide Museum programming and resources, but also from the support of our Members, donors, volunteers, and more. We cannot wait to open our doors once again to you all. Until then, we hope you will take advantage of all the wonderful programs outlined in this guide. - Mary Pat Higgins, Museum President and CEO | Frank Risch, Board Chair

© Amanada Lynn Harris Photography


TABLE OF CONTENTS Virtual Program Calendar

2-4

Adult iRead Book Club

5-6

History Highlights Lecture Series

7-8

Empowerment and Inclusion through Story Time

9-10

Family-Friendly iRead Book Club

11-12

Permanent Exhibition Highlight Series

13-14

Crucial Conversations: Race and Racism in Our Community

15-16

Summer Survivor Speaker Series

17-18

Movie Mondays

19-20

Film Discussion: Resistance

21-22

Special Exhibition: The Fight for Civil Rights in the South

23-24

Virtual Summer Camps

25-26

Membership

27-28

The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum is dedicated to teaching the history of the Holocaust and advancing human rights to combat prejudice, hatred, and indifference. Please note that programs are subject to change without notice. Visit DHHRM.org for up-to-date information.


Screenshot from the Museum’s Virtual Tour of The Fight for Civil Rights in the South. Page 23


VIRTUAL PROGRAMS Monday, June 1 | 1:00 pm Family-Friendly iRead Book Club: When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit by Judith Kerr

JUNE 2020

Wednesday, June 3 | 7:00 pm Panel Discussion: Suffrage for All? (Part of the Permanent Exhibition Highlight Series)

Tuesday, June 9 | 7:00 pm History Highlights: Holocaust Memorialization in the United States and Israel

Wednesday, June 10 | 7:00 pm The Economy of Sex Trafficking (Part of the Permanent Exhibition Highlight Series)

Monday, June 15 | 7:00 pm Movie Monday Film Discussion: Milk

Tuesday, June 16 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Tuesday, June 23 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Tuesday, June 23 | 7:00 pm History Highlights: The Armenian Genocide

Friday, June 12 | 9:30 am Empowerment and Inclusion through Story Time: The Invisible Boy by Trudy Ludwig

Monday, June 15 | 1:00 pm iRead Book Club for Adults: The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom

Friday, June 26 | 9:30 am Teaching Inclusion and Empowerment through Story Time: What Should Danny Do? by Adir Levy and Ganit Levy Tuesday, June 30 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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JULY 2020 Wednesday, July 1 | 7:00 pm

VIRTUAL PROGRAMS Tuesday, July 16 | 7:00 pm Guilty Until Proven Innocent: A Conversation with Richard Miles (Part of the Permanent Exhibition Highlight Series)

Film Discussion: Resistance (In partnership with Dallas Jewish Film Festival)

Monday, July 20 | 1:00 pm iRead Book Club for Adults: The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris

Monday, July 20 | 7:00 pm Movie Monday Film Discussion: Schindler’s List

Monday, July 6 | 1:00 pm Family-Friendly iRead Book Club: Hidden by Loic Dauvillier, Greg Salsedo, and Marc Lizano

Tuesday, July 21 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Tuesday, July 7 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Friday, July 10 | 9:30 am Teaching Inclusion and Empowerment through Story Time: I’m Like You, You’re Like Me by Cindy Gainer

Tuesday, July 14 | 12:30 pm

Thursday July 23 | 7:00 pm Crucial Conversations: Race & Racism in our Community | Session 1- Starting the Conversation

Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Friday, July 24 | 9:30 am

Tuesday, July 14 | 7:00 pm

Teaching Inclusion and Empowerment through Story Time: Kindness is Cooler, Mrs. Ruler by Margery Cuyler

History Highlights: Legalizing the Holocaust

Tuesday, July 28 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Tuesday, July 28 | 7:00 pm 3

History Highlights: A Look into the Museum’s Online Artifact Collection


VIRTUAL PROGRAMS Monday, August 3 | 1:00 pm Family-Friendly iRead Book Club: Hana’s Suitcase: A Quest To Solve a Holocaust Mystery by Karen Levine

AUGUST 2020

Tuesday, August 4 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Tuesday, August 11 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Monday, August 17 | 1:00 pm iRead Book Club for Adults: Sons and Soldiers by Bruce Henderson

Tuesday, August 11 | 7:00 pm History Highlights: The Bosnian Genocide

Monday, August 17 | 7:00 pm Movie Monday Film Discussion: Hotel Mumbai

Tuesday, August 18 | 12:30 pm Summer Survivor Speaker Series

Thursday, August 20 | 7:00 pm Thursday, August 13 | 7:00 pm Disability Rights in the United States: A History in Three Parts (Part of the Permanent Exhibition Highlight Series)

Friday, August 14 | 9:30 am Teaching Inclusion and Empowerment through Story Time: Ordinary Mary’s Extraordinary Deed by Emily Pearson

Crucial Conversations: Race & Racism in our Community | Session 2 - The Past

Tuesday, August 25 | 7:00 pm History Highlights: Unusual Artifacts

Friday, August 28 | 9:30 am Empowerment and Inclusion through Story Time: She Persisted by Alexandra Boiger and Chelsea Clinton

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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ADULT iREAD BOOK CLUB Third Mondays at 1:00 pm CDT (audience: adults) Join us for a virtual book club for adults led by Museum Historians.

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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6/15 – The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom Corrie Ten Boom was a Dutch watchmaker who became a heroine of the Resistance, a survivor of Nazi concentration camps, and one of the most remarkable evangelists of the twentieth century. In World War II, she and her family risked their lives to help Jews escape from the Nazis, and for their work they were tested in the infamous concentration camps. Ten Boom survived to tell the story of how faith ultimately triumphs over evil.

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7/20 – The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris In 1942, Lale Sokolov arrived in Auschwitz-Birkenau. He was given the job of tattooing the prisoners marked for survival scratching numbers into his fellow victims’ arms in indelible ink to create what would become one of the most potent symbols of the Holocaust. Waiting in line to be tattooed, terrified and shaking, was a young woman. For Lale, it was love at first sight. And he was determined not only to survive himself, but to ensure she did too.

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8/17 – Sons and Soldiers by Bruce Henderson Sons and Soldiers: The Untold Story of the Jews Who Escaped the Nazis and Returned with the U.S. Army to Fight Hitler tells the little-known story of young German Jews, dubbed The Ritchie Boys, who fled Nazi Germany in the 1930s, came of age in America, and returned to Europe at enormous personal risk as members of the U.S. Army to play a key role in the Allied victory.

REGISTER HERE 6


HISTORY HIGHLIGHTS LECTURE SERIES 2nd and 4th Tuesdays at 7:00 pm CDT (Audience: high school and adults) The History Highlights series features Holocaust and human rights topics presented by Museum Historians and Educators.

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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6/9 – Holocaust Memorialization in the United States and Israel Join Dr. Sara Abosch-Jacobson, Chief Education, Programs, and Exhibitions Officer, for a discussion on how the Holocaust has been memorialized in Israel and the United States.

WATCH PAST EVENT

6/23 – The Armenian Genocide

WATCH PAST EVENT

Join Dr. Sara Abosch-Jacobson, Chief Education, Programs, and Exhibitions Officer, for an introduction to the Armenian Genocide.

7/14 – Legalizing the Holocaust Join Dr. Charlotte Decoster, Director of Education, for a discussion on how Nazi Germany used the rule of law to commit mass murder during the Holocaust.

WATCH PAST EVENT

7/28 – A Look into the Museum’s Online Artifact Collections

REGISTER HERE

Join Felicia Williamson, Director of Library & Archives, for a look into the Museum’s online archival collections.

8/11 – The Bosnian Genocide Join Dr. Charlotte Decoster, Director of Education, for an introduction to the Bosnian Genocide, which took place in the mid-1990s.

REGISTER HERE

8/25 – Unusual Artifacts Join Felicia Williamson, Director of Library & Archives, for a discussion on some of the Museum’s most unique artifacts.

REGISTER HERE 8


EMPOWERMENT AND INCLUSION THROUGH STORY TIME 2nd and 4th Fridays at 9:30 am CDT (Audience: Toddlers and Pre-K and Kindergarten-aged children) Join us for a virtual story time led by Museum Educators. All featured books instill young children with lessons on diversity, tolerance, and empowerment.

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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6/12

6/26

The Invisible Boy by Trudy Ludwig

What Should Danny Do? by Adir Levy and Ganit Levy

WATCH PAST EVENT

WATCH PAST EVENT

7/24

7/10

I’m Like You, You’re Like Me by Cindy Gainer

Kindness is Cooler, Mrs. Ruler by Margery Cuyler

WATCH PAST EVENT

8/14

REGISTER HERE

8/28

Ordinary Mary’s Extraordinary Deed by Emily Pearson

REGISTER HERE

She Persisted by Alexandra Boiger and Chelsea Clinton

REGISTER HERE 10


FAMILY-FRIENDLY iREAD BOOK CLUB 1st Mondays at 1:00 pm CDT (Audience: students 6th – 12th grade and adults) Join us for a virtual book club for teens and adults led by Museum historians.

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6/1 - When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit by Judith Kerr Anna is not sure who Hitler is, but she sees his face on posters all over Berlin. Then one morning, Anna and her brother awake to find her father gone. Her mother explains that their father has had to leave and soon they will secretly join him. Anna just doesn’t understand. Why do their parents keep insisting that Germany is no longer safe for Jews like them? Because of Hitler, Anna must leave everything behind.

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7/6 - Hidden by Loic Dauvillier, Greg Salsedo, and Marc Lizano In this gentle, poetic graphic novel, Dounia, a grandmother, tells her granddaughter the story even her son has never heard: how, as a young Jewish girl in Paris, she was hidden away from the Nazis by a series of neighbors and friends who risked their lives to keep her alive when her parents had been taken to concentration camps.

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8/3 - Hana’s Suitcase: A Quest To Solve a Holocaust Mystery by Karen Levine In March 2000, Fumiko Ishioka, the curator of a small Holocaust education center in Tokyo, received an empty suitcase from the museum at Auschwitz. On the outside, in white paint, were the words “Hana Brady, May 16, 1931, Orphan.” Fumiko and the children at the center were determined to find out who Hana was and what happened to her all those years ago, leading them to a startling and emotional discovery. The dual narrative intertwines Fumiko’s international journey to find the truth about Hana Brady’s fate with Hana’s own compelling story of her life in a quiet Czech town, which is shattered by the arrival of the Nazis, tearing apart the family she loves.

REGISTER HERE All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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PERMANENT EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHT SERIES 7:00 pm CDT

Guilty Until Proven Innocent: A Conversation with Richard Miles

SPONSORED BY:

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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6/3 – Panel Discussion: Suffrage for All? To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, join us for a panel discussion on women’s suffrage in the United States. The conversation will move beyond the traditional narrative of women’s suffrage, focusing on how women of color were empowered in women’s suffrage movements.

WATCH PAST EVENT

6/10 – The Economy of Sex Trafficking Join Christina Bain, Visiting Researcher, Center for the Study of Europe, Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University, and Lindsey Speed, Executive Director of Traffick911, for a conversation about the role businesses play in propagating and preventing human trafficking, as well data-driven solutions to trafficking.

WATCH PAST EVENT

7/16 – Guilty Until Proven Innocent: A Conversation with Richard Miles In 1995, at the age of 20, Richard Miles was convicted of a murder he did not commit. He spent 15 years in prison before he was finally released, and he fought another two and a half years before he was declared “truly” innocent and his conviction was reversed. Miles took his experiences and channeled them into founding Miles of Freedom, an organization that equips, empowers, and employs individuals returning home from prison and provides support for families and communities impacted by incarceration. Richard Miles will be joined by Gary Udashen, a criminal appellate specialist and past president of The Innocence Project of Texas, for a conversation about wrongful conviction and the path to justice.

WATCH PAST EVENT 8/13 – Disability Rights in the United States: A History in Three Parts The history of disability rights in the United States is as long as the history of the nation itself. Join us to learn about three different eras in disability rights history: pre-Civil War, the early 20th century eugenics movement, and the modern disability rights movement. Speakers: Dr. Nicole Belolan, Public Historian in Residence at Rutgers University-Camden; Richard LaVallo, Legal Director for Disability Rights Texas; Dr. Michael Rembis, Associate Professor of History and Director of the Center for Disability Studies at SUNY: University at Buffalo.

REGISTER HERE 14


CRUCIAL CONVERSATIONS: RACE AND RACISM IN OUR COMMUNITY Join the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum for a four-part program series on race and racism in our community. The series will continue in September and October.

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7/23 – Session 1: Starting the Conversation Join us for a conversation between Kamilah Collins, President of Collins Collaborations and experienced advocate for equitable practices and inclusive communication, and Mary Pat Higgins, President and CEO of the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum. In this session, we will discuss the “why” behind this series and how we approach the conversation as a museum. We will aim to establish a common knowledge base and define terms related to racism, systemic racism, bias, and equity. The information provided in this session will lay the groundwork and serve as a point of entry for the conversations we will have throughout the series.

WATCH PAST EVENT

8/20 – Session 2: The Past In this discussion, we aim to place race relations and systemic racism in Dallas in historical context. Dallas has a long history of racial inequity and division in education, housing, policing and other sectors that is not often discussed. We will bring this history to light and acknowledge the longstanding structures and policies that still affect communities of color today. We cannot move forward until we understand our historical foundations.

REGISTER HERE

PRESENTED BY: Geraldine Acuña-Sunshine and Gabe Sunshine

SERIES SPONSOR:

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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SUMMER SURVIVOR SPEAKER SERIES Tuesdays at 12:30 pm CDT Join us to hear the testimonies of Holocaust Survivors, Refugees, and Hidden Children, as well as Second Generation Survivors.

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SUMMER SURVIVOR SPEAKER DATES SPONSORED BY:

JUNE WATCH 6/16 EVENT

WATCH 6/30 EVENT

WATCH 6/23 EVENT

JULY WATCH 7/7 EVENT

WATCH 7/21 EVENT

WATCH 7/14 EVENT

REGISTER 7/28

AUGUST REGISTER 8/4

REGISTER 8/18

REGISTER 8/11

All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

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MOVIE MONDAYS 3rd Mondays at 7:00 pm CDT Join us every third Monday of the month for a discussion on Holocaust and human rights films moderated by Museum historians, film professionals, and other experts. Participants will watch the film on their own before engaging in the discussion.

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6/15 - Milk In 1972, Harvey Milk and his then-partner Scott Smith leave New York for San Francisco with Milk determined to accomplish something meaningful in his life. Milk settles in the Castro District and helps transform the area into a mecca for gays and lesbians. In 1977, he becomes the nation’s first openly gay man elected to a notable public office. Participants will watch the film on their own before engaging in the discussion.

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7/20 - Schindler’s List Arriving in Krakow at the start of World War II in 1939, businessman Oskar Schindler hopes to make his fortune from the war. After joining the Nazi party for political reasons, Schindler staffs his factory with Jewish workers. When the SS begin exterminating Jews in the Krakow Ghetto, Schindler arranges to have his workers protected initially to keep his factory in operation, but ultimately to save innocent lives. Participants will watch the film on their own before engaging in the discussion.

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8/17 - Hotel Mumbai As members of the Lashkar-e-Taiba storm the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel in a series of coordinated attacks throughout Mumbai, India, a brave chef and kitchen worker decide to risk their own lives to try and protect frightened guests. Participants will watch the film on their own before engaging in the discussion.

REGISTER HERE All programming admission is free and based on first come, first served registration.

20


FILM DISCUSSION: Resistance In partnership with Dallas Jewish Film Festival

July 1st | 7:00 pm CDT

Jesse Eisenberg (Resistance)

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7/1 - Resistance The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum is proud to partner with the Dallas Jewish Film Festival, IFC Films, and Mean Streets Management to offer a complimentary, live, online discussion with Jonathan Jakubowicz, Director of Resistance, and featured actor Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network). Resistance tells the remarkable true story of world-famous mime Marcel Marceau’s experience in the French Resistance during WWII. The discussion will be moderated by Dr. Sara Abosch-Jacobson, the Museum’s Chief Education, Programs, and Exhibitions Officer. Participants will watch the film on their own before engaging in the discussion.

WATCH PAST EVENT

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NEW -VIRTUAL VIRTUAL TOUR

W TOU IE

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Current Special Exhibition

© SPIDER MARTIN

The Fight for Civil Rights in the South combines Selma to Montgomery: Photographs by Spider Martin and Courage Under Fire: The 1961 Burning of the Freedom Riders Bus. They are curated and circulated by the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (BCRI), with contributions from the City of Birmingham and to BCRI’s Corporate Campaign.

The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum would like to thank Corgan for helping make this virtual tour possible.

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Extended through January 14, 2021 Presented by:

Supported by: by: Supported

Exhibition Sponsors: Office of

Arts & Culture African American Forum, an Employee Resource Group at State Farm® Minority Men Affinity Network, an Employee Resource Group at State Farm®

Exhibition Community Partners: AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM OF DALLAS | ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE TEXOMA BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS GREATER DALLAS | CONGREGATION ANSHAI TORAH DALLAS TRUTH, RACIAL HEALING, AND TRANSFORMATION | DENTON BLACK FILM FESTIVAL GRANT HALLIBURTON FOUNDATION | LEGACY SENIOR COMMUNITIES REFUGEE SERVICES OF TEXAS, INC. | SMU HUMAN RIGHTS PROGRAM VICKERY MEADOWS YOUTH DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION | WiNGS WORLD AFFAIRS COUNCIL OF DALLAS/FORT WORTH

© Amanada Lynn Harris Photography

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Extended into August!

Presents

DHHRM

AGES 6-10 VIRTUAL WEEKLY THEMES CULTURAL ENGAGEMENT

SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL LEARNING

AT HOME ACTIVITIES

FREE SIGN UP HERE

For more information, email Casey Bush at cbush@dhhrm.org. 25


Ex

te n

de

d

in

to

Au

gu

Presents

st

!

UPSTANDER INSTITUTE AGES 11-18 VIRTUAL WEEKLY THEMES SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL LEARNING

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

FREE SIGN UP HERE

LEADERSHIP BUILDING

AT HOME ACTIVITES

For more information, email Casey Bush at cbush@dhhrm.org. 26


JOIN OUR COMMUNITY OF UPSTANDERS. BECOME A MEMBER TODAY!

© Amanada Lynn Harris Photography

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Š Amanada Lynn Harris Photography

MEMBER BENEFITS INCLUDE: Unlimited complimentary admission to permanent and special exhibitions, free entry to the Funk Family Upstander Speaker Series, and discounts to additional educational programs and events. All Museum Membership gifts directly support our mission and our programming, whether in-person or virtual. As a Member, you are actively participating with the Museum as we impact behavior by changing attitudes and actions through education. Students and adults learn what can happen when hatred, prejudice, and intolerance go unchecked. Visitors are encouraged to be Upstanders by standing up for others.

CLICK HERE to learn about Membership benefits! Membership starts at just $50. We need your support, now more than ever. For additional information, please contact Deanne McElroy, Membership Manager, at 469-399-5210 or dmcelroy@dhhrm.org. Discounts are available for students, educators, senior citizens, military, people with disabilities, and Museum volunteers. 28


@DHHRM @DHHRM_ORG DHHRM @DHHRM_ORG Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum

DHHRM.ORG


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