Monday, January 24, 2022

JewishGen Holocaust Remembrance Day Program

 Click on this link to register for the meeting:


https://898a.blackbaudhosting.com/898a/JewishGen-Talks-Stories-of-Escape

In commemoration of International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the entire JewishGen community is invited to join us for our next free JewishGen Talks webinar:


Topic: Stories of Escape - How Four WWII Jewish Refugees Survived by Landing in Japan
Speaker: Mark Halperin
Date: Wednesday, January 26, 2022
Time: 2:00 PM Eastern Standard Time
Registration: Free with a suggested donation. Please click here to register now

Thousands of Jews fled war-torn Europe by traveling eastward via Shanghai and Japan. In this talk, Mark will trace the very interesting journeys of survival of four refugees from Europe to safe harbor in the United States – two in the New York area and two in the Los Angeles area. This talk will highlight the exploits of many virtuous souls including Chiune Sugihara, the Japanese consul in Lithuania who issued transit visas to over 2000 Jewish refugees. Along with providing their interesting narratives, Mark will share many of the research sources and practices used to document their journeys.
 
Registration:
Registration is free with a suggested donation. Please click here to register nowAfter registering, you will receive a confirmation email about how to join the webinar.

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Wednesday, January 12, 2022

 THE JEWISHGEN.ORG BLOG LINK:

https://www.jewishgen.org/blog/?p=expanded-access-to-holocaust-research

Yad Vashem Partners with the Museum of Jewish Heritage and JewishGen to Expand Access to Yad Vashem's “Pages of Testimony” and the 4,800,000 names commemorated in the Central Database of Shoah Victims’ Names

Genealogy researchers on JewishGen can now tap into Yad Vashem’s collection of Pages of Testimony memorializing family and friends lost in the Holocaust

11 January 2022

The Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust and its affiliate JewishGen have announced a new partnership with Yad Vashem, the World Holocaust Remembrance Center, whereby researchers will be able to access Yad Vashem’s Pages of Testimony data as part of a genealogical search on the JewishGen website – the largest online Jewish genealogy resource of its kind, which includes a Holocaust collection of nearly 3.8 million records. 

Museum of Jewish Heritage President and CEO Jack Kliger says:

“By making available these precious records via JewishGen, the broader Jewish community can more easily research names of family and friends who were murdered during the Holocaust. The agreement facilitates access to the resources of our Museum and Yad Vashem, two of the most prestigious Holocaust memorial institutions in the world.”

Yad Vashem Chairman Dani Dayan states:

"Yad Vashem's Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names brings the millions of faceless victims into the light and returns to them their identity, so the world can remember. This is part of Yad Vashem's mission to gather all forms of documentation from the Holocaust, including the collection of names of our brethren who were murdered during the Shoah. We owe it to them to know that they lived, what they looked like, what they dreamed about and at the very least – what their name was."

Since the 1950s, Yad Vashem has collected "Pages of Testimony," in which members of the public memorialize family members and friends who were murdered during the Holocaust. In many cases, these Pages – that comprise the names, biographical details and if possible, photographs – might contain the only evidence of what happened to their loved ones.

Dr. Alexander Avram, Director of Yad Vashem’s Hall of Names observes:

"More than one million Holocaust victims have yet to be memorialized at Yad Vashem. It is our expectation that by widening the exposure of our endeavor through JewishGen, the genealogical community will be able to play an important role in helping us add a large number of Pages of Testimony in the years to come.”

JewishGen Executive Director Avraham Groll notes:

“Researchers will now be able to retrieve Pages of Testimony data through a direct search within JewishGen. This common access to data from both institutions will directly benefit researchers by increasing the likelihood that they will find useful information. Without this new agreement, many Jewish genealogists may otherwise not have been aware of this vital resource.”

Yad Vashem has been running their Names Collection endeavor for over six decades, with the aim of restoring the personal identities and recording the brief life stories of the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis and their accomplices. The names documented in Yad Vashem’s Central Database of Shoah Victims’ Names are sourced from many different sources, including Pages of Testimony. To date Yad Vashem has gathered some 2,700,000 Pages of Testimony. The Names Database currently commemorates over 4,800,000 Jewish men, women and children who were murdered in the Holocaust.

This collection can be searched via the JewishGen Holocaust Database (
https://www.jewishgen.org/databases/holocaust/) or via the JewishGen Unified Search

YIVO INSTITUTE Vilna Collection

 https://www.yivo.org/

Thanks to our JGSGM member Marian Wertalka for sharing this topic with me.


The YIVO institute for Jewish Research (YIVO) has completed the digitisation of its prewar library and archival collections.

The New York-based institute announced on Monday that it had completed the Edward Blank YIVO Vilna Online Collections Project (EBYVOC), a 7-year initiative that cost 7 million US dollars (6.18 million euros).

The aim of the project was to process, conserve and digitise YIVO’s divided prewar library and archival collections. The materials were digitally assembled in one place, on a dedicated website, becoming accessible to a worldwide audience for the first time, the institute said in a press release.

“This unparalleled collection sheds new light on the prewar Jewish history and culture across Eastern Europe and Russia, it will benefit scholars, students and the global public for generations to come,” the Lithuanian Ministry of Culture said in a press release.

The collections gives a glimpse into how Eastern European Jews lived, where they came from, how they raised and educated their families, how they created art, literature, music, and language.

The documents also describe relations between Jews and their non-Jewish neighbours, how they understood their place in the world both politically and socially and how they dealt with the turmoil and promises of modernity.

The project involved digitising approximately 4.1 million pages of books, artefacts, records, manuscripts, and documents stored in New York and Vilnius.

YIVO was founded in Vilnius in 1925. It collected Jewish folklore, memoirs, books and publications, Jewish community documents.

In 1941, the Nazis ransacked the YIVO Institute in Vilnius. Many documents were destroyed and a group of Vilnius ghetto workers were forced to sort through the collections and select materials to be shipped to Frankfurt, for use in the Nazi Institute for the Study of the Jewish Question.

In 1946, the US military recovered these documents and sent them to YIVO in New York.

Parts of the materials were hidden in Vilnius, in the Church of St. George, converted by the Soviets into the Lithuanian Book Chamber, until they were discovered in 1989.

Moreover, approximately 170,000 additional documents were discovered in the National Library of Lithuania in 2017, including rare and unpublished works.


A memorial plaque for the YIVO institute in Vilnius
3 / 4E.Genys/LRT