“Our commitment must be to remember the victims who perished, respect the survivors still with us, and reaffirm humanity's common aspiration for mutual understanding and justice.”
-- Declaration of the Stockholm International Forum on the Holocaust
“Our commitment must be to remember the victims who perished, respect the survivors still with us, and reaffirm humanity's common aspiration for mutual understanding and justice.”
-- Declaration of the Stockholm International Forum on the Holocaust
The POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews invites university students from Poland, Germany and Israel to participate in the second edition of the international Polin Meeting Point – Summer Education School.
From 9-15 April the 10th jubilee Festival of Tolerance takes place in Zagreb, presenting more than 60 movies chosen with the goal of promoting tolerance and diversity.
On 24 March in Zagreb, the Institute Ivo Pilar and Roma National Council presented the book Stradanje Roma u NDH (Suffering of Roma in the Independent State of Croatia).
International Roma Day on April 8 is an annual opportunity to celebrate the Romani culture. It is also a time to reflect on the discrimination and challenges millions of Roma continue to face in their daily lives in areas including education, employment, housing, healthcare and policing.
POLIN Museum, together with HL-Senteret, invites practitioners, museum professionals, artists, project-makers who work on Jewish cultural heritage to present and share their achievements, methods of work, and experiences.
On 1 June the 2016 Monna and Otto Weinmann Annual Lecture will take place at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
The graduate-level Genocide Prevention Certificate (GPC) program is now open for enrollment.
From 1-12 August 2016, the International Institue for Genocide and Human Rights Studies in Toronto will hold the 15th Genocide and Human Rights University Summer Programme (GHRUP).
The fourth international summer school on minority rights will take place from 10-16 July in Budapest.
On 11 March, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia commemorated 7,144 Jews who were deported to the extermination camp Treblinka in 1943.