Engaging minds. Changing the world.
The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies is an interdisciplinary academic center committed to advancing research, education and public programming in the fields of Holocaust education, comparative genocide, conflict studies and human rights. Its academic, professional development and public programs aim to educate and empower students, teachers and the community to combat racism, prejudice, ethnic hatred and abuse of authority—the root causes of mass violence and atrocities.
The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies just celebrated its 10-year anniversary. To learn more about the history of the Center, .
Call for Participants: The Russian-Speaking Jewish Community in the North Shore and the Greater Boston Area: An Oral History Project. Learn more about how to participate.
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The Latest
International Study and Travel Institutes
Each summer, the CHGS organizes a study and travel course to international sites of genocide and mass atrocities for students and professional educators. Students visit museums and historical sites, learn from local academic experts, and share ideas about curriculum and teaching.
Teacher Workshops and Seminars
The CHGS holds a number of curriculum and educator workshops and seminars each year that prepare teachers to engage students on difficult topics including teaching the Holocaust, civil rights, Native American history and LGBTQ history.
Sonia Schreiber Weitz Lecture Series and Public Events
The Sonia Schreiber Weitz Lecture series, Research Conversations series and public events bring international, national and local scholars and public figures to engage our audiences on issues in comparative genocide, human rights and combatting ignorance, racism and prejudice in our world.
Salem State students visit the National Memorial Fort Breendonk in Belgium, which served as a Nazi prison camp during the German occupation.
Interdisciplinary CHGS Courses
Salem State students visit the Track 17 Memorial in Berlin which commemorates Jewish men, women, and children who were deported by the Duetsche Reichsbahn during the Nazi Era.
Transformational Experiences
´ºÃÎÖ±²¥ students take pictures from their Jeeps during a safari in the Akagera National Park. Students report that their travel courses have transformed their view of the world and left them with memories that will last a lifetime.
Watch CHGS Event Recordings
The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies has hosted several virtual events to continue hosting compelling speakers during the COVID-19 pandemic. Click a program title to watch the recording online.
- September 23, 2024 -
- November 29, 2023 -
- April 27, 2023 -
- February 8, 2023 - Zoë Kessler, Dmytro Say, and Yvonne Vissing, ´ºÃÎÖ±²¥.
- November 17, 2022 - Jan Grabowski, University of Ottowa.
- November 2, 2022 - Alisa Sopova and Vladimir Petrovich.
- November 3, 2021 - . Featuring Professors Darren Ranco and Steven Silvern.
- April 6, 2021 -
- March 9, 2021 - featuring Dr. Miriam Kassenoff, Holocaust survivor and educator
- February 24, 2021 - featuring Renee Billingslea
- January 27, 2021 - featuring Dr. Bisola Ojikutu and Professor Samuel Roberts
CHGS Offerings
Supporters
CHGS is generously supported by the Cummings Foundation and Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston.
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Contact Us
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Email chgs@salemstate.edu for more information or to be put on our mailing list.
Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies
352 Lafayette St.
Salem, MA 01970