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Haaretz, one of the most influential Israel’s daily newspapers, has written about Poles preserving Jewish heritage of their hometowns. Judy Maltz’s article The Self-appointed, non-Jewish ‘Guardians of Jewish Memory’ in Poland, the third in a series of special reports from Poland, highlights the amazing work of Leaders of Dialogue as well as countrywide impact of the School of Dialogue program.

May 3rd, 2018

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We have finished the Polish Jewish Exchange Program visit to the U.S. organized in cooperation with the AJC. April 22-29 our delegation visited Washington, Chicago and New York. Their stay in the U.S. was filled with meetings, among others with AJC staff, regional and national board members, as well as Rabbi Andy Baker, AJC Director of International Jewish Affairs, AJC Assistant Director Belle Yoeli, AIPAC Director of the International Affairs Department Stephen Schneider, HIAS Senior Director Naomi Steinberg, and David Harris, Chief Executive Officer of the AJC. Among the highlights of the trip were site visits, including United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., as well as tour of the Borough Park neighborhood of the borough of Brooklyn. This visit to the one of the largest Orthodox Jewish communities outside Israel and home to many Hasidic Jews, mainly of the Bobover branch, was guided by Prof. Robert Moses Shapiro of the Brooklyn College of the University of New York.

The program is offering ample opportunities for less formal conversations during lunches and dinners as well. For our participants it is an unique chance to look into the life of the Jewish community in the U.S. and see how the Jewish organizations contribute to the civil society, but also to learn more about the Jewish perspective on Polish/Jewish dialogue.

photo: Z.Radzik, M.Weiss

April 30th, 2018

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March 3rd, 2018

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Richard Weintraub, a descendant of Polish Jews and a participant of Forum’s 2014 Study Visit to Poland, came back to visit School of Dialogue students in Krempna. This was the second time Richard visited Poland to search for information about his family. In 2015 together with his family he visited School of Dialogue students in Maków Mazowiecki.

During the presentation of their findings, students and their guest established a deep connection. Later the students and Richard drove to Hałbowska mountain pass. At the site of a mass grave were over 1200 local Jews lost their lives during the war, the students lit candles in a gesture of respect and commemoration. After saying goodbye to the students, Richard went to another small town, Kotań, where he visited a small Orthodox church. When he explained to the keeper of the church that his family came from the area, the keeper of the church exclaimed: “You’re a local!”

It is extremely moving to see this type of interfaith and intercultural dialogue happen.

We encourage you to watch this short documentary featuring fragments from Richard Weintraub’s first roots visit to Poland in 2015.

June 27th, 2017

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We have finished the Polish Jewish Exchange Program visit to the U.S. organized in cooperation with the AJC. Our delegation went to Washington, D.C., Chicago and New York and had their week filled with meetings, site visits including United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., as well as home hospitality and cultural events. Among the highlights of the trip were meetings with AJC staff, regional and national board members, as well as Rabbi Andy Baker, Director of International Jewish Affairs, and AJC CEO David Harris. The group also met with Polish Deputy Chief of Mission, Paweł Kotowski, and Lukas Fuksa, President of the Polish American Leadership Political Action Committee. The program offered ample opportunities for less formal conversations during lunches and dinners, including one with a Holocaust survivor, Aron Elster. In New York Polish delegates were welcomed to a Shabbat dinner hosted by AJC members, and could enjoy a jazz concert.

June 19th, 2017

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It is difficult to talk with teenagers about the Holocaust in a way that is both sensitive and frank. But George Elbaum, a Warsaw-born Holocaust Survivor, who has met with School of Dialogue alumni in Błonie, Mszczonów and Grójec, knows how to captivate his young audience.

The author of “Neither Yesterdays, Nor Tomorrows. Vignettes from the Holocaust,” published in Polish with the help of Forum for Dialogue, moved his audience and inspired a lively Q&A session afterwards. So lively, in fact, that the meeting in Mszczonów took an hour more than was planned! Students lined up to have their copy of the book signed.

After reading that he likes sweets, the students from Grójec baked their visitor a Polish cheesecake, which he mentions in his book. The students in Błonie offered him handmade ceramic cups filled to the brim with marzipan – his favorite.

George Elbaum was visiting Poland in the company of his wife and son, who took part in the Jewish tour of Grójec prepared by the students in the School of Dialogue program.

“It’s a lesson of real history that someone lived, and it allows us to believe and understand what someone else, who lived there and then, went through. We can hear it first-hand.”

Meeting participant

June 3rd, 2017

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5th Leaders of Dialogue Conference was inaugurated with an opening dinner and a keynote address by Marc Skvirsky, the Vice President and Chief Program Officer at Facing History and Ourselves. It was a welcomed opportunity to catch up with the amazing people that form our network of activists, artists, educators, local government officials and entrepreneurs dedicated to saving Polish/Jewish memory from oblivion. We were also honored to have George Elbaum, a Warsaw-born Holocaust Survivor join us for the opening night. Tomorrow we start the day with presentations by Leaders of Dialogue who are themselves experts in their respective fields.

The 5th Leaders of Dialogue Conference introduced changes to the way the event is organized. This year we have invited five Leaders to join our Program Board, so that the program truly reflected the needs of our network. We have also invited so-called “flying experts” who, though not presenting at the Conference, are available for consultation to any of the participants. Among the experts, we have Alicja Mroczkowska from the Jewish Historical Institute, Krzysztof Bielawski from the Museum of the History of Polish Jews Polin, and Barbara Engelking representing the Polish Center for Holocaust Research.

Attended by over 50 Leaders, including about 20 first-timers, it was, in our humble opinion, a great success. The Conference was a fantastic educational and networking opportunity. It was also a very moving meeting of close friends. We were really sad to let them go back to their homes, but we know that they return re-energized to do more of the amazing and humbling work that we appreciate them for.

Project co-financed by Ledor Wador Foundation and Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.

May 28th, 2017

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We are happy to report that the first round of workshops in all the 21 schools of the 2017 School of Dialogue spring semester has been completed. Though we’ve been running the School of Dialogue program since 2008, we keep on being positively surprised. This time it was the Junior High School in Starachowice, where the school authorities surprised the students and Forum’s educators with a special visit of local experts on Jewish history and tradition: Jerzy Miśkiewicz, Deputy Mayor of Starachowice, Agnieszka Malinowska, a doctoral student researching local Jewish history, and Dawid Szychowski, Starachowice-born rabbi from Łódź. The meeting was an opportunity for students to ask questions, and consult with the Deputy Mayor.

May 16th, 2017

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On Tuesday,  May 10, 2017 Forum’s educators met with Israeli students of the Oranim Academic College to share experiences and talk about the challenges involved in educating about dialogue and mutual understanding. The workshop was held at the Menora Info Punkt and focused on innovative methods of teaching about the past to create a more tolerant and open society of the future. This is the second time Forum’s delegates meet with the students, who are in awe of the work accomplished in Polish schools.

May 12th, 2017

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Effects of School of Dialogue now in a PhD dissertation! We are very proud that our flagship educational program aimed at fighting prejudice and preserving Jewish heritage in Poland has been the basis for a thesis entitled “The influence of contact with a multicultural past on intergroup attitudes and civic engagement” defended by Anna Stefaniak at the Faculty of Psychology at the University of Warsaw yesterday. The dissertation shows how attitudes towards others change once students are exposed to information about the past multicultural environment of their town or village. The contemporary homogenous communities give little opportunity to encounter the other, which may foster xenophobic attitudes, but learning about the local Jewish heritage and the ethnic and cultural diversity of a given area makes these students more open to difference. Dr. Stefaniak received a distinction for the dissertation and defense.

May 8th, 2017

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