• Study Visits

    Poland Up Close and Personal

Since 2006, Forum for Dialogue has been organizing study visits to Poland for Jewish community leaders from the US, Canada, Australia, Great Britain and Israel. In the course of a one-week stay, participants get acquainted with modern Poland, the subtleties of Polish/Jewish relations and the renascent Jewish community. Aside from meetings with experts, the study tours provide an opportunity for informal meetings with Polish public opinion leaders, School of Dialogue students and Leaders of Dialogue – local activists from smaller towns.

Such visits to Poland open our guests’ eyes to a reality entirely new to them and thus – as they often say – completely transforms their outlook on Poland.
Study tour participants meet experts on Polish/Jewish matters, history, democratic transformation and economy – journalists, politicians, scholars and businessmen. On the one hand, they learn about the past, but at the same time they are informed about contemporary Polish life and organizations that work to develop Polish/Jewish relations.  They hear about the rebirth of Jewish life in Poland from representatives of the local Jewish community. They also have a chance to conduct informal meetings over guest dinners held in houses of Friends of Forum for Dialogue. Aside from these informal sessions, participants most value meetings with school students and local activists, who are genuine proof that Poland is changing at every level.

The image of Poland we present is honest – without any embellishments or sugarcoating. We acknowledge the difficult family memories that our guests often bring with them. The study visits allow for a broader perspective when looking at one’s own family history and confront guests with their own emotions and often prejudice. Oftentimes, the visit results in guests returning with their families to explore sites connected to their roots. Many guests wish to continue exploring Poland with us, as evidenced by the popularity of the reunion event we organized in June 2015, which included attendees from ten years ago as well as those who had visited Poland just half a year earlier. For most participants, the study tour to Poland is a beginning of a renewed relationship with the land of their ancestors.

If you want to see what a new Poland thinks, feels and behaves about its Jews, come to Poland… You will be surprised, you will be deeply moved.

Sam Lipski, Chief Executive
The Pratt Foundation, Australia

fot. O.Kaczmarek, M.Usiekniewicz, M.Halaczek, Z.Radzik

I came on this trip to Poland with a mostly cynical attitude, as part of which ‘being thrown out of Poland’ in 1968 as a 5 year old had become the core of my identity. As I turned 50, I felt a need to repair my relationship with Poland, and this trip helped tremendously. I saw the new, free Poland, very different than my childhood memories. Having had such a deep, emotional experience, I had my Polish citizenship reinstated. Our family decided together to honor our 20 generations of Jewish ancestors who lived in Poland by having our youngest son’s Bar Mitzvah in Poland.

Eva Wisnik, New York

January 19th, 2017

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We have finished a week-long study trip to Poland for our guests from Israel and the US. After visiting Warsaw, participants continued to Gliwice, Krakow, Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum and Memorial, and in Skierniewice met with students involved with the School of Dialogue program there. The group also met with Karolina Jakoweńko, a participant in our Leaders of Dialogue program, who told our guests about her work in preserving the Jewish heritage of Gliwice and Będzin. Take a look at some more photos from the December study trip. We would like to thank all the participants for this meaningful journey!

December 19th, 2016

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The participants of our December study trip to Poland met in Będzin with Karolina and Piotr Jakoweńko, Dariusz Walerjański, the three participants in our Leaders of Dialogue program, and with invited guests to celebrate a Shabbat dinner together. In the premises of a former House of Prayer looked after the Brama Cukermana Foundation, they sat together at one table to learn about each other and connect. This meeting was very meaningful for everyone present there. Take a look at some photos from this amazing evening!

photo: T.Slutzky

December 16th, 2016

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Ewa Koper, this year’s recipient of The David and Anna Dlugie Kliger Scholarship has returned from her research trip to Israel. The scholar, who works at the Bełżec Museum and Memorial, has decided to use the scholarship for a 10-day research trip to Israel, during which she interviewed 12 survivors, to record their war-time stories. Have a look at the pictures from the intense trip!
Forum for Dialogue has been awarding The David and Anna Dlugie Kliger Scholarship with the support of Alan Metnick and The David and Anna Dlugie Kliger Fund since 2014. Every year one scholarship is given to a participant of the Leaders of Dialogue program to assist them in personal and professional development.

December 9th, 2016

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Forum for Dialogue organized another study trip to Poland for our guests from Israel and the United States. A dinner with Andrzej Folwarczny, President of the Forum, opened the study trip, and the next day participants, despite the snow and cold, were touring Warsaw and city’s Jewish sites.

December 6th, 2016

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On November sForum for Dialogue have organized the study trip to Poland for four Jewish leaders from the U.S.
From Warsaw, the group continued to Wieluń, where they met with the School of Dialogue alumni. After getting to know each other, the students took our group on a walking tour around Jewish sites of the town. Krakow was the last stop of this study trip.
Project is co-financed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland.

November 23rd, 2016

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Here are some more photos of the study trip! Braving the cold, our guests went so far on a tour of Warsaw and city’s Jewish sites, visited POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews and Zabińskis’ Villa at the Warsaw ZOO. They met for discussions with distinguished speakers, as the Ambassador of Israel to Poland Ms. Anna Azari, as well as with experts and representatives of the Jewish community. From Warsaw participants continued to Wieluń where they met with students of the School of Dialogue program.

November 18th, 2016

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Congratulations to Karolina Panz, a participant in our Leaders of Dialogue program, who was announced yesterday winner of the Israel Gutman Award for the best academic article on the Holocaust in 2015. Her work about Jewish victims of armed violence in Podhale between 1945-1947 appeared in the eleventh volume of the Holocaust. Studies and Materials. The Israel Gutman Award is given by The Polish Center for Holocaust Research and honors authors for their reliable studies of the subject. The award ceremony will be held on December 5 in Warsaw. Once again congratulations to Karolina!

November 16th, 2016

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We welcomed four Jewish leaders from Tacoma, Miami, Chicago and Philadelphia, USA, who came to Poland to take part in a study trip organized by Forum for Dialogue. At the opening dinner, trip participants met with Olga Kaczmarek, Director of International Relations at Forum, who introduced them to the program and Forum activities. The next day, the group has taken a tour of Warsaw, visited POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews and discussed Christian-Jewish relations over dinner with Zuzanna Radzik, Forum Board Member.

November 14th, 2016

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Yesterday, on the International Day Against Fascism and Antisemitism, students from Drawsko-Pomorskie, alumni of the School of Dialogue program, organized an event to commemorate the 78th anniversary of Kristallnacht — the night of broken glass — during which the Nazis staged a wave of attacks on Jews in Germany and Austria. Students put photographs and information on the front door of a town building located on one of the main streets in Drawsko-Pomorskie in order to raise awareness about the events among town residents and provoke reflection.

November 10th, 2016

Posted In: EN News 2016

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