Kassow to give talk on hidden archives of the Warsaw Ghetto

Photo Credit: Samuel D. Kassow
by Nichole Brady Tue, 01/28/2020 - 10:08

The Harris Center for Judaic Studies will welcome speaker Dr. Samuel D. Kassow, editor of Who Will Write our History?, who will give a lecture on the secret archives found buried in the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II. He will speak on March 4, 2020 at 7:00 P.M. in Love Library South, room 102. The talk is free and open to the public.

The son of two Holocaust survivors, Kassow was born in a displaced persons camp in Germany in 1946 and his first spoken language was Yiddish. Years after getting his PhD, he began to research and write about the Holocaust, specifically the Warsaw Ghetto and Polish Jews. This research led him to the hidden archives of the Oyneg Shabes organization: a group of writers, historians, and rabbis lead by Emanuel Ringelblum. The Oyneg Shabes collected and created thousands of documents about life in the Warsaw Ghetto. These documents consisting of diaries, drawings, and decrees issued by German authorities that described the daily life and horrors for the Jewish people.

Abstract:
During World War II Jews turned pen and paper into effective tools of spiritual resistance. The Germans not only wanted to wipe out the Jews but also to erase their memory. But even in the face of death, Jews set up secret archives to bury “time capsules” full of documents and ensure that future generations would remember them on the basis of Jewish sources and not German propaganda. The clandestine archive in the Warsaw Ghetto, organized by the historian Emanuel Ringelblum, was one of the largest examples of cultural resistance in Nazi occupied Europe. Of the 60 people who worked on this national mission, only three survived. This will be their story.

Kassow flyer