Resilient Spaces: An Exhibition on Jewish hide-outs During the

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 18 вер 2024
  • 🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷
    The TJHTalks program is supported solely by contributions from our viewing audience.
    If you would like to support future webinars, please make a tax-deductible donation to the Friends of the Taube Center Foundation.
    Using the link below ⬇️, you can donate directly by credit card. ⬇️
    ➡️ ➡️ ➡️
    bit.ly/supportT...
    🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷🔷
    For the past three years, Dr. Natalia Romik, together with an interdisciplinary team of professionals, has been conducting in-depth investigations into the legacy of spaces that served as hideouts for Jews during the German occupation. The team documented the topography of the spaces, researching how they were created and sustained. Romik’s work is currently being presented at the National Zacheta Gallery in Warsaw ‪@zachetanarodowagaleriasztu1076‬
    in an exhibition Hideouts: The Architecture of Survival. The exhibition presents her artistic renderings of the spaces, the stories of those who sought shelter, and the fate of those who helped them.
    Professor François Guesnet, a professor of Modern Jewish History in the Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at University College London, prolific author and co-editor of the Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry series with Professor Antony #Polansky. Guesnet served as Dr. Romik’s thesis advisor and is immersed in the subjects.
    Together, they will discuss how each hideout was researched and the extensive preparation for the exhibition. They will also explore the historical context and the narrative that each shelter conveys and how they serve historical sites and memorials.
    Natalia Romik holds an M.A. in political studies from the Warsaw University and a Ph.D. from Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London, UK. Since 2007, she has worked as an architect and curator, designing exhibitions. Natalia created many installations and performances including Zamenhof Birthday, Shtetl Signboard, Virtual Economic Zone, and Nomadic Shtetl Archive. Together, with the Nizio Design International, she worked on the design of the Core Exhibition at the @MuzeumPOLIN_official POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews. Her projects explore themes of cultural memory, ephemeral aspects of architecture, and urban emptiness.
    François Guesnet is Professor of Modern Jewish History in the Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at University College London. He holds a PhD in Modern History from Albert-Ludwigs-Universität, Freiburg im Breisgau, and specializes in the early modern and 19th century history of Eastern European and, more specifically, Polish Jews. He has held research fellowships and visiting teaching positions at the Hebrew University Jerusalem, Leipzig University and the University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia). His book publications include Antisemitism in an Era of Transition: The Case of Post-Communist Eastern Central Europe (2014), Warsaw. The Jewish Metropolis (2015, written together with Glenn Dynner) and Negotiating Religion: Cross-disciplinary perspectives (2016). He contributed, among others, to numerous articles to the YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe and chapters to the Cambridge History of Judaism.
    The webinar includes a 45-minute discussion followed by a 15-minute Q&A, in which you can ask questions submitted during the broadcast.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3

  • @mbfotograf
    @mbfotograf 3 місяці тому

    Thank you so much for this important talk! I am myself in an artistic research about memory, resilience and an artistic interpretation of remembrance of current forms of memorials. I just bought the book of Natalia Romik and you helped me a lot to deepen my field of knowledge.

  • @orliszpon3220
    @orliszpon3220 2 роки тому +2

    Most hiding places were quite prosaic: attics, cellars, dugouts in fields and forests, bunkers, etc., many Ingeniously camouflaged. However, I am impressed by Natalia Romik's dedication to tell the story of the efforts of Jews to survive the Holocaust and of the courage of those in the local population to shelter their Jewish brethren. I would venture to guess that the overwhelming majority of those places no longer exist.

    • @scottwalker6897
      @scottwalker6897 2 роки тому

      seems the jews that fled to the forest and hid in various places had a better chance of surviving the war than the Jews that went to the concentration camps.