• What’s New

    at Forum for Dialogue?

The first workshops of the new semester of the School of Dialogue program begun in mid-September. Forum educators visited students in participant schools to conduct the first of four workshops. We are incredibly happy to once more see our students in class! Aware of the unstable health situation, the educators and the students are prepared to move online if there is need for that.

Twenty schools joined the program this semester, and those listed below already had their first workshops:

• Maria Curie-Skłodowska School Complex in Rusiec
• Piotr Skarga High School in Szamotuły
• Józef Bliziński Elementary School in Bóbrka
• Polish Noble Laureates Elementary School in Otwock
• Janusz Kusociński High School no 7 and Emil Waryński High School no 8 in Bydgoszcz
• Jan Walery Jędrzejewicz Elementary School no 2 in Płońsk
• May 3rd Elementary School in Kalisz
• Wacław Nałkowski High School no 1 in Wołomin
• Zygmunt Puławski Vocational Education Center in Świdnik.

The workshops will continue till the end of November, and the commemoration project created by the students should be ready by December 10, 2021. Each group of students will have to decide if they want to prepare an online walking tour of the Jewish sites of their town or organize one offline with an audience of their choosing.

The School of Dialogue workshops in the fall semester are organized within two grant projects:
• 12 schools from towns below 30 thousand residents are financed thanks to the Active Citizens Fund – National financed by the Norwegian and EEA funds;
• 8 remaining schools are financed thanks to the generosity of Friends of the Forum, Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, and individual and institutional donors from Poland and abroad

Project co-financed by Friends of the Forum, Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, and individual and institutional donors from Poland and abroad.


Project financed by the Active Citizens Fund – National financed by the Norwegian and EEA funds.

October 8th, 2021

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We are relaunching the Shared Heritage program as a series of conversations with international experts on Jewish/Christian relations addressed to Polish Christian leaders.

These online conversations will offer a deep dive into Christian/Jewish relations from both historical and contemporary perspectives, as well as personal and practical experiences of our guests. We aim to show Judaism as a vibrant community of faith, looking for ways of being in the modern world. Too often has Christianity ignored the developments in Judaism and the diversity of its theology.

The meetings, hosted by Zuzanna Radzik, a theologian and Forum’s VP, will be conducted in English with simultaneous translation into Polish.

October 12, 7 p.m. Warsaw time
Can a Rabbi be a Woman?: A Conversation with Rabbi Jeffrey Fox

The guest of the upcoming meeting, Rabbi Jeffrey S. Fox is a Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Maharat, who will talk about the daily realities of a yeshiva. Yeshivat Maharat was the first Orthodox yeshiva to start teaching women for leadership roles. These graduates, fluent in Jewish law and theology, use the titles “Maharat” and “Raba” which makes them de facto Rabbis. This is why we will talk more broadly about what is Orthodox Judaism and how flexible it is to accommodate contemporary needs and demands. We shall also ask about the role of the rabbi in the wake of such changes, and the type of religious leadership needed by communities of Orthodox Jews.

Registration link

Facebook Event

November 23, 7 p.m. Warsaw time
Judaism Rethought, or On Modern Rituals: A Conversation with Aliza Kline

Aliza Klien, the co-founder and Director General of OneTable, an organization which involves thousands of young Jews in shared preparation of Shabbat dinners, will be our guest. Before OneTable, Aliza created the Mayyim Hayyim Community Mikveh & Education Center in Boston, the success of which shows that even  a superficially archaic custom may become a modern practice with a new meaning.

Registration link

Facebook Event

October 28, 7 p.m. Warsaw time
Challenges in Christian/Jewish Relations from a Jewish Perspective: A Conversation with Rabbi David Rosen

The Jewish take on the changes in Christian/Jewish relations over the 20th and 21st centuries will be the focus of the talk. Our guest, Rabbi David Rosen, Director of International Interreligious Affairs at the AJC, is involved in relations with the Vatican and global networks of interreligious dialogue. Together, we will examine the achievements and challenges of dialogue.

Registration link

Facebook event

December 14, 7 p.m. Warsaw time
When Christians Like Jews a Bit Too Much, or Philosemitism and Judaization in Contemporary Christianity: A Conversation with David Sandmel

Rabbi David Sandamel, Director of Interreligious Affairs at the ADL, will be Forum’s guest. This time, we will focus on Christians who while reaching to the roots of Christianity in Judaism adopt the rituals of the latter. Our focus is on the ways it affects Jews and how they feel about it.

Registration link

Facebook Event

Rabbi Jeffrey S. Fox

Rabbi Jeffrey S. Fox a Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Maharat was the first graduate of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah. Upon graduation he served as the Rabbi of Kehilat Kesher: The Community Synagogue of Tenafly and Englewood for seven years. In Rabbi Fox’s tenure at Kesher, the community grew three-fold from thirty families to nearly one hundred. During that time Rabbi Fox also taught at Yeshivat Chovevei Torah as well as the Florence Melton Adult Education School in Bergen County. He also served on the board of the Synagogue Leadership Initiative of the UJA of NNJ. Rabbi Fox is a Senior Rabbinic Fellow of the Shalom Hartman Institute and has also been a member of the faculty of the Drisha Institute, the Florence Melton Adult Education School in Westchester County, and Hadar.

Rabbi David Rosen

Rabbi David Rosen, AJC’s International Director of Interreligious Affairs, has been advancing understanding and good relations between religious communities for more than forty years – from the time he served as rabbi of the largest Orthodox Jewish congregation in South Africa, during his tenure as Chief Rabbi of Ireland; and throughout the last more than thirty years based in Jerusalem. In addition to interreligious representation and education, his work involves mediation and peace building and he is heavily involved in multi-religious engagement on ecological issues. Among the various awards and recognition he has received, Rabbi Rosen was granted a papal Knighthood in 2005 for his contribution to Jewish-Catholic reconciliation and in 2010 he was made a CBE (Commander of the British Empire) by H.M. Queen Elizabeth II for his work promoting interfaith understanding and cooperation.

Rabbi David Fox Sandmel, Ph.D.

Rabbi David Fox Sandmel, Ph.D. is chair of the International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Relations (www.ijcic.net) , the consortium of Jewish organization that is the official Jewish dialogue partner of the Vatican, the World Council of Churches, and the Ecumenical Patriarch of the Orthodox churches.  He has been with ADL (Anti-Defamation League) since 2014 and currently serves as Senior Advisor on Interreligious Affairs.  He held the Crown-Ryan Chair of Jewish Studies at the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago (2002-2014). He was the Jewish Scholar at the Institute for Christian & Jewish Studies in Baltimore (1998-2001) where he directed the publication of “Dabru Emet: A Jewish Statement on Christians and Christianity.”  He lectures and publishes issues in Jewish-Christian relations, Jewish-Muslim relations, and the foundations of Judaism and Christianity in antiquity.  His commentary on First Thessalonians appears in the Jewish Annotated New Testament.

Aliza Kline

Aliza Kline is the President and CEO of OneTable. At a time when many feel isolated and disconnected from Jewish life, OneTable creates new ways to connect with each other, time, and community by linking Jewish wisdom with modern technology. Founded in 2014, OneTable has grown to a national organization that engages tens of thousands Jewish young adults through peer-led Shabbat dinners. Since the onset of the Coronavirus pandemic, OneTable has expanded to serve the broader community – most recently by launching HereFor.com a platform to enable individuals to find alternative High Holiday celebrations. Also the founding executive director of Mayyim Hayyim Community Mikveh & Education Center, Aliza has devoted her career to re-imagining Jewish ritual open to the full diversity of the community. She lives in Brooklyn, NY with her partner Rabbi Bradley Solmsen and three daughters.

In 2021, the program is co-financed by the Dutch Humanitarian Fund and the Congregation of Our Lady of Sion.

October 7th, 2021

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Summer and early fall is a time when many of the Leaders of Dialogue activists organize ceremonies commemorating the deportations and annihilation of the Jews from their towns. This year the form of these events had to conform to the Covid-19 safety restrictions, oftentimes including activities that were planned for the previous year but were canceled due to the epidemic.

Many of the ceremonies included the unveiling of permanent commemorations of the local Jewish community. In Rabka-Zdrój, a plaque with all the names of the Jews killed during the war was unveiled thanks to the efforts of Michał Rapta and Narcyz Listkowski, members of the Leaders of Dialogue network and pillars of the Historia Rabki association. For press coverage in Polish, you may click here. Another plaque, this time marking the deportation site, was unveiled in Biecz thanks to the efforts of Krzysztof Przybylowicz, co-organizer of a ceremony commemorating local Jews. The Jews of Mińsk Mazowiecki were also commemorated with a plaque. Katarzyna Łaziuk has been working to preserve the memory of the Shoah for years. First as a teacher of English and a local activists, and now as a representative of local authorities. On August 22, she co-organized a commemoration ceremony at the local Jewish cemetery, as well as the unveiling of a plaque marking the tragic events at the Kopernik labor camp, a presentation of five bus stops featuring an overview of the Jewish history of Minsk, and an opening of an exhibition. The day-long commemoration ended with a performance by Lena Piekniewska singing “A Lullaby for an Eternal Dream.”

Members of the Leaders of Dialogue network, Katarzyna Suszkiewicz and Tomasz Kocur, who run the AntySchematy 2 Foundation dedicated to the preservation of places of memory, invite the local community and young people in their activities. For the past months, they have been organizing commemorative events in Sędziszów Małopolski, Jasło, and Radomyśl Wielki. During their Days of Memory event they read out the names of the members of the local Jewish community, lit candles in their honor, and left flowers in a gesture of respect. The activists working together as the Shetl of Tsanz organized an Assembly of Remembrance in several towns nearby: Stary Sącz, Limanowa, Gródek upon Dunajec and Nowy Sącz.

There were also the annual Marches of Memory in Otwock and Rymanów, and in the fall there will be one in Brzesko (October 2 and 3) and Pułtusk. In Otwock, the March was a part of the events commemorating the 79th anniversary of the ghetto liquidations in Otwock, Falenica and Rembertów. These events included meetings with descendants of local Jews, panel discussions, walking tours and concerts.

In Szczekociny, the commemoration of the local Jewih community was part of the Szczekociny Dialogue of Cultures Festival, initiated by Mirosław Skrzypczyk, a local Leader of Dialogue. The event aims to create a space of intersection of cultures which have contributed and continue to contribute to Szczekociny history and identity. The key term of the festival is its titular “dialogue.” The organizers believe that different perspectives can be in dialogue and complement one another.

The commemorative ceremony in Jedwabne was organized by the Warsaw Jewish Community. We encourage you to read a very moving account of Kamil Mrozowicz, a member of the Leaders of Dialogue network active in Jedwabne, about the memory and its lack in the town. The text is available in Polish here.

Other commemorative events were organized thanks to the tireless efforts of activists of the Leaders of Dialogue network from Mszana Dolna (Urszula Antosz-Rekucka), Dukla (Jacek Koszczan), Jędrzejów (Klaudia Kwiecińska), Wieluń (Agnieszka Mysakowska), Wola Michowa (Joanna Potaczek), Dębica (Ireneusz Socha), Białowieża (Katarzyna Winiarska), Zduńska Wola (Kamila Klauzińska), Czarny Dunajec and Krościenko upon Dunajec (People, not Numbers).

September 13th, 2021

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From March to June 2021, Forum has run another round of School of Dialogue workshops. Due to concerns over health safety caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, all the workshops in participant schools were conducted online.

For both students and teachers, who have been learning and teaching remotely since the beginning of the school year, taking part in an extracurricular activity was a challenge. This is why we are in such awe of those who did take part in the most recent edition of the program.

In the spring semester we had 11 schools joining the two projects run by the Forum.

The first project, co-financed by Friends of the Forum, Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, and individual donors from Poland and abroad featured four schools:

• Queen Jadwiga Bilingual High School no 9 in Rzeszów
• Maria Skłodowska-Curie Elementary School no 1 in Mysłowice
• Karol Adamiecki Economics School Complex in Dąbrowa Górnicza
• John Paul II Academic High School in Biała Podlaska.

The second project made possible by the Active Citizens Fund – National financed by the Norwegian and EEA funds featured seven schools:

• Cpt. Stanisław Skarżyński Elementary School in Warta
• “Elementarz” Foundation Elementary School in Jackowo
• Fr. Jan Twardowski Elementary School no 5 in Biłgoraj
• Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński School Complex in Kadzidło
• John Paul II Elementary School in Zielonki
• Stanisław Staszic School Complex in Stąporków
• Wedel-Tuczyńscy Family Elementary School in Tuczyn.

During the spring semester, 170 students and 15 teachers took active part in the program.

In all locations, the participants commemorated local Jewish communities both on and offline. They created online maps of Jewish sites, walking routes, and guides (in Polish, English, and German), interviews with eyewitnesses, history quizzes, and social media profiles. The students also organized meetings with guest speakers online, and during periods of relaxation of COVID-19 restrictions also events and walking tours following the traces of Jewish communities in their towns.

The outcomes of commemorative projects submitted by students participating in the spring 2021 and fall 2021 edition of the School of Dialogue program will be evaluated in January 2022 by an expert jury that will select the most accomplished submissions.

Project co-financed by Friends of the Forum, Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, and individual donors from Poland and abroad.

The project is made possible by the Active Citizens Fund – National financed by the Norwegian and EEA funds.

August 11th, 2021

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Begun in December 2019, the series of seminars dedicated to teachers was designed on the basis of Roberta Grossman’s Who Will Write our History [LINK] documentary about the Ringelblum Archive – the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto. The story of the Oneg Shabbat group and their methods served as inspiration for concrete educational tools. Our methodology prioritized the experience of individuals to show the diversity of prewar Jewish life in Poland.

The series included 7 workshops focused in the following provinces:

  • Lublin Province
  • Swiętokrzystkie Province
  • Podlasie Province
  • Łódź Province
  • Greater Poland Province
  • Kujawsko-Pomorskie and Pomeranian Provinces
  • Podkarpacie and Lessser Poland Provinces

We focused each seminar on the Jewish history of a region and sought support from local activists and educators of the Leaders of Dialogue network: Marek Kołcon, Mirosław Skrzypczyk, Mariusz Sokołowski, Anita Rucioch-Gołek, Jakub Niewiński and Edyta Danielska. These seminars are an opportunity to network local teachers and educators, explore archival material pertinent to local Jewish history, and introduce methods of working with the archives for  teachers interested in working on the Jewish heritage with their students.

The first two seminars were organized in Lublin and Kielce with the support of Grodzka Gate and Jan Karski Association respectively. Due to the pandemic, the remaining seminars were organized online. Though unable to meet face-to-face, the participants of the online seminars had more time to explore the materials in the digital Ringelblum Archive at the Central Jewish Library run by the Jewish Historical Institute and other online archives. Despite the pressure put on schools by the Covid-19 pandemic, we had 171 teachers from all over Poland participate in the program. This showed us how many teachers search for new ways of expanding their knowledge and competences in educating about Polish/Jewish history. We wish the participants and their students all the best in their journey of discovery of local Jewish history.

The dedicated lesson plans (in Polish) are available for download at the School of Dialogue website.

Educational initiatives related to Who Will Write Our History have been made possible thanks to the generosity of Al and Gayle Berg Family Found

July 4th, 2021

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June 22nd, 2021

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March 31st, 2021

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Each year, we encourage the schools we work with to participate in the Holocaust Art & Writing Contest organized by the Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education at Chapman University in Orange County, California. While preparing for the contest, the students select and view testimonies of Holocaust Survivors and create films, prose or poetry based on their recollections. The organizers prepared testimonies of Michał Głowiński, Janina Bauman and Teresa Prekerowa for Polish participants. The competition is based on something that is very important in our thinking about education: direct use of testimonies of witnesses of history, learning from such accounts, passing on the message of the Survivors. That is why we encourage teachers and students to use the USC Shoah Foundation resources and search for accounts about their towns and the surroundings.

This year, among 220 schools from 13 countries that participated in the contest, 13 were from Poland. A student from Romuald Traugutt High School in Warsaw was selected as one of the finalists. Congratulations to all involved in this important project!

March 20th, 2021

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On March 2-3, we held a seminar for elementary and high school teachers from Podlaskie and Mazowieckie provinces. The starting point for reflection on Polish/Jewish history was the film “Who Will Write Our History”, which tells the unique story of the Ringelblum Archive – the Underground Warsaw Ghetto Archive. The archive, one of the most important sources on the extermination of Polish Jews, was found after the war and entered on the UNESCO Memory of the World Register.

We tried to translate the ideas of the Oneg Shabbat collection created in conspiracy into specific educational tools. We looked at the prewar Jewish community with the perspective of a history written from the bottom up, which gives subjectivity to ordinary people and shows the diversity of their fates.

The seminar provided a space for discussion on how to talk about the history and culture of Polish Jews by focusing on individual, local experiences. The participants were given tips on how to discover local Jewish history, how to look for information in online archives and how to access Ringelblum Archive materials on a given region online.

During the meeting we also talked about how to build youth engagement. We presented and discussed together exercises that can be carried out in the classroom. Part of the seminar was also an inspiring meeting with Mariusz Sokolowski, a teacher from Wasilków and Białystok, who for many years has been involved, together with his students, in preserving Jewish memory in his town.

March 4th, 2021

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In February, we held a series of meetings as part of the Zoom in on the Forum, which allows us to keep in touch with recipients of our program and our allies despite the limitations of the pandemic.  We organized two guided virtual tours: of Israel for Polish viewers, and of Lodz for foreign audiences. Polish viewers also had the opportunity to see and learn more about the newly opened permanent exhibition on the history of the Sobibór extermination camp and Operation Reinhardt at the Sobibór Museum and Memorial during a meeting with Museum Director Tomasz Oleksy-Zborowski.

We also held a series of substantive meetings for an international audience, including one on Holocaust research in Poland. Two researchers from the Polish Academy of Sciences, Agnieszka Haska, a sociologist and anthropologist and Krzysztof Persak, a historian,  discussed the growing body of scholarly work on the Shoah in Poland. They presented the most important findings and the public perception of publications describing the fate of Jews and the attitudes of Poles during and immediately after World War II.

Since many international Friends of the Forum are interested in the state of civil society, education and the politics of remembrance in Poland, we invited Agata Szczęśniak, a journalist and political commentator, to talk about the current political and societal affairs in Piland. We also met with Patrycja Dołowy, who shared her thoughts on literature and art devoted to the experiences of Jewish women in 20th-century Poland.

February 28th, 2021

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