Special Event Announcements

Tour Newport’s Loeb Visitors Center and Touro Synagogue 10/29/14

Newport field tripJoin Professor Arnie Dashefsky and his Honors SOCI2509W (The Sociology of Anti-Semitism) as they visit Newport, RI to tour the Loeb Visitor Center and Touro Synagogue. The Loeb Visitors Center exhibitions are a celebration of America’s first amendment rights and help us learn how religious freedom and the clear separation of church and state came to be part of American law and culture. The Touro Synagogue is an American treasure, the oldest active synagogue in the US.  It is considered an icon of American religious freedom, because of a letter written by George Washing- ton to the Hebrew Congregation at Newport in 1790, which affirmed the principle of religious liberty based on the separation of church and state.

Register here: http://uconn-newport.eventbrite.com

 

 

 

Yiddish Tish 2014-15 Dates Announced

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Come join in on the Yiddish Tish Wednesdays, 12-1pm, for the upcoming Academic year.

 

September 10, 2014 12:00-1:00pm, Administrative Conference Room, Dodd Building

October 8, 2014; 12:00-1:00pm, Administrative Conference Room, Dodd Building

November 19, 2014; 12:00-1:00pm, Administrative Conference Room, Dodd Building

February 25, 2015; 12:00-1:00pm, Administrative Conference Room, Dodd Building

March 25, 2015; 12:00-1:00pm, Administrative Conference Room, Dodd Building

April 22, 2015; 12:00-1:00pm, Administrative Conference Room, Dodd Building

 

Bring a lunch, we’ll provide beverages and dessert!  Hope to see you there!

Poetry Reading by Joan Seliger Sidney at UConn Coop Storrs Center on 4/28/14 at 7pm

sidney_cover_lgsidneyAs good fortune would have it, following the Holocaust Convocation our colleague, Joan Seliger Sidney, will be launching her latest book of poetry, Bereft and Blessed, at the UConn Bookstore. Why not join us for both events!

Apr 28 2014 7:00 pm, at UConn Co-op Bookstore at Storrs Center, One Royce Circle, Unit 101, Storrs

Jennifer Sidney Silva, a flautist with the Elm City Winds, will open the evening.

Please join us to celebrate the publication of Joan Seliger Sidney’s new book from Antrim House, Bereft and Blessed.  Joan Seliger Sidney’s Body of Diminishing Motion: Poems and a Memoir was published by CavanKerry Press. Her poems have appeared in The Louisville Review, The Massachusetts Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Jewish Currents, Caduceus, Theodate, and elsewhere. Joan has received individual artist’s poetry fellowships from Connecticut Commission on the Arts, Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism, Craig H. Neilsen Foundation, Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation, Vermont Studio Center, also a Visiting Faculty Fellowship from Yale. She’s writer-in-residence at the University of Connecticut’s Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life. In addition, she facilitates “Writing for Your Life,” an adult workshop.

 

Holocaust Convocation and I. Martin and Janet M. Fierberg Lecture – April 28, 2014 5pm


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The I.Martin and Janet M. Fierberg Lecture and 27th Academic Convocation on the Holocaust will be held on Monday, April 28th, at 5pm in the Doris and Simon Konover Auditorium, Thomas J. Dodd Research Center.

The event will include a welcome by Dr. Jeffrey Shoulson, Doris and Simon Konover Chair of Judaic Studies and the Director of the Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life, and Professor, Department of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages and Professor, Department of English.

Student Awards will be presented by Joan Seliger Sidney, Writer-in-Residence, Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life, at which time a student will be presented with the Frances and Irving Seliger Prize for Excellence in Holocaust Studies.

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The speaker will be Ellen Cassedy, award-winning author of “We Are Here: Memories of the Lithuanian Holocaust” (2012), a ground breaking account of how a post-Holocaust nation is, and is not, engaging with its Jewish heritage. Her essays and translations have appeared in Polin, Ha’aretz, The Forward, and other publications. With Yermiyahu Ahron Taub, she received the 2012 Translation Prize awarded by the National Yiddish Book Center. She was a speechwriter in the Clinton Administration and a columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News. Ms. Cassedy resides near Washington, D.C.

Ellen Cassedy’s lecture topic will be “Can Vilnius Remember Vilna? Facing the Holocaust in the former Jerusalem of the North”.  A  reception will immediately follow.

The Center looks forward to hosting this annual event.  Please RSVP here.  For additional information, please call 860-486-2271, or email judaicstudies@uconn.edu.

 

 

 

Deborah Lipstadt Lecture – 75th Anniversary of Kristallnacht – 11/11/13

Deborah Lipstadt Lecture – 75th Anniversary of Kristallnacht – 11/11/13

Deborah LipstadtOn November 11, 2013, over 500 guests attended a special lecture to mark the 75th Anniversary of Kristallnacht, by Professor Deborah Lipstadt, titled “Holocaust Denial: A New Form of Anti-Semitism”.  A packed auditorium and additional overflow room by live broadcast enjoyed over an hour of lecture and open discussion with Dr Lipstadt.  Dr Lipstadt is an Internationally Recognized Scholar, and Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University, and  is the author of numerous books and scholarly articles and is an internationally respected historian of the Holocaust. She has been at the forefront of efforts to confront and respond to revisionist accounts of the Nazi genocides. Professor Lipstadt first came to wider public attention when she and the publisher of her book, Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory (1993), were sued for libel by the British historian David Irving. In a celebrated court case, Lipstadt’s attorneys brought forth irrefutable evidence of the atrocities of the Shoah, soundly defeating Irving’s accusations that Lipstadt’s depiction of him as a Holocaust-denier was false and libelous. Lipstadt went on to write a riveting memoir of the trial, History on Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving (2005).  In 2011 she published the award-winning The Eichmann Trial.

This lecture was made possible through the generous contributions of The Dodd Center, the Office of Global Affairs at UConn, the Konover Chair, the Center for Judaic Studies and the Doris and Simon Konover Chair, and the Alumni Association.  The program was also supported by the Archdiocese of Hartford, the Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Hartford, the Greater Hartford Rabbinic Association, the Development Corporation for Israel, the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Hartford, the University of Hartford’s Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies, and the Greater Hartford Jewish Federation.

The Center for Judaic Studies is extremely pleased with the interest from the public and community organizations, and thanks all of our participants for attending this event.  For further information about the programs and events sponsored by the Center for Judaic Studies, please call 860-486-2271 or by email:judaicstudies@uconn.edu.