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Museum News
May 21, 2013

Chicago Reader | "This is not a Holocaust story, this is a war story": The life of Hannah Senesh


"In the end," says curator Louis Levine of his latest exhibit, dedicated to the life of the poet Hannah Senesh, "this is not a Holocaust story. This is a war story."


Read Online >


May 21, 2013

Skokie Review | In her own words: Holocaust Museum’s Hannah Senesh exhibition transcends myth


The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center's new traveling exhibition isn't interested in showing Hannah Senesh as an iconic and heroic martyr.


Read Online >


May 7, 2013

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum honors human trafficking activist


One person who stands up for what is right and tries to stop what is wrong in the world can make a difference, a simple reality behind the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s “Power of One” award.


Read Online >


May 7, 2013

Pioneer Local | Norridge student’s poem wins award from Illinois Holocaust Museum


The impact of the Holocaust still resonates with a Ridgewood High School student.


Read Online >


May 6, 2013

Pioneer Local | Suburban teens win Holocaust art contest


Four teens from the northwest suburbs learned this winter how to better think about the world far beyond the Chicago area.


Read Online >


May 2, 2013

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum hosting conference on genocides


Less than a month after the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center ran its first program on the Armenian Genocide, a two-day symposium covering even more ground is slated for the same venue.


Read Online >


May 1, 2013

The Armenian Weekly | Balakian Speaks at Illinois Holocaust Museum


Author Peter Balakian spoke to an audience of more than 250 people on Sat., April 20, at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie, a suburb of Chicago, and a town that is still remembered for the controversial march of neo-Nazi groups there in 1979.


Read Online >


april 29, 2013

Asbarez Armenian News | Balakian Launches Illinois Holocaust Museum 2015 Project


Peter Balakian spoke Sunday, April 20 to an audience of more than 250 people at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie, a suburb of Chicago, and a town that is still remembered for the controversial march of neo-Nazi groups there in 1979.


Read Online >


april 25, 2013

Skokie Review | Museum focuses on Hannah Senesh in new exhibition


The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center will introduce visitors to Hannah Senesh, one of Israel’s most iconic heroes even though she was killed at only age 23.


Read Online >


april 24, 2013

Broadway World | Chicago Museum Presents Fire in My Heart: The Story of Hannah Senesh, 5/14


Fire in My Heart: The Story of Hannah Senesh sheds light on Hannah Senesh, the inspiring 23-year-old young woman who died by firing squad in 1944, but has endured as one of Israel's most iconic heroes.

Read Online >


april 24, 2013

Public Radio of Armenia | Holocaust Museum shines light on Armenian Genocide


The Illinois Holocaust Museum will sponsor a major exhibition on the Armenian Genocide in 2015 to mark its 100th anniversary, museum next month will host a two-day conference, “The Ottoman Turkish Genocides of Anatolian Christians,” Executive Director of the Museum Rick Hirschhaut said, Skokie Review reports.

Read Online >

 

april 23, 2013

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum shines light on Armenian Genocide

Raphael Lemkin, a Polish Lawyer of Jewish descent, first coined the term “genocide” in 1944 to describe the systematic extermination of Armenians and Assyrians during and after World War I.

Read Online >


april 22, 2013

Skokie Review | Illinois Holocaust Museum meets gold standard for being green


No one can visit the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center without realizing how unique and special it is as a piece of architecture.



Read Online >


april 18, 2013

The Daily Sizzle | "Israeli Joan of Arc" featured in new museum exhibit


The Illinois Holocaust Museum recently announced its upcoming exhibit, "Fire in My Heart: The Story of Hannah Senesh" on the life of the heroic poet from Budapest known as the "Israeli Joan of Arc."


Read Online >

april 18, 2013

Chicago Tribune | The real stories behind 'No Place on Earth'


For 511 days, they hid underground in Ukrainian caves while fellow Jews were being executed by machine gun up above.



Read Online >


april 18, 2013

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: New documentary unearths Nazi survival story


Returning to the Ukrainian cave 67 years later – the raw space that protected him from deadly persecution by Nazis in World War II – the survivor makes a simple request.


Read Online >

april 18, 2013

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum plays key role in survivor documentary


When filmmakers were looking to produce a documentary about 38 Holocaust survivors who lived underground in western Ukraine, the Illinois Holocaust Museum was one of their first outreaches.


Read Online >


april 17, 2013

Chicago Sun-Times | ‘No Place on Earth’ sheds light on Holocaust survivors’ cave dwellings


Returning to the Ukrainian cave 67 years later — the raw space that protected him from deadly persecution by Nazis in World War II — the survivor makes a simple request: Turn off the lights.



Read Online >


april 10, 2013

Jewish World Review | No Place on Earth

 

Nearly 75 years after the end of World War II, one has to dig pretty deep to find a unique Holocaust story for the big screen.


Read Online >


APRIL 5, 2013

NBC5 | Police Recruits Spend Day Immersed in History


During their six months of training, recruits receive more hours of human behavior instruction than most police officers.


Watch Online >

 

april 1, 2013

Clean Edison Blog | LEED Certifications of March


On January 29, 2013, the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center was awarded LEED Gold Certification.


Read Online >


march 27, 2013

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum takes spot among greenest buildings


Architect Stanley Tigerman has many accomplishments to his name, but he admits that his lasting legacy — the project he wants to best be remembered for — is the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center in Skokie.


Read Online >


march 26, 2013

Skokie Patch | Illinois Holocaust Museum Achieves LEED Gold Certification

 
The Skokie-based museum is the second museum in the Chicago area to achieve the LEED gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.


Read Online >


march 26, 2013

Trib Local | Illinois Holocaust Museum Receives $315,000 Grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation


The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation has awarded a first-time grant of $315,000 to the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.


Read Online >


march 15, 2013

Splash | Illinois Holocaust Museum Humanitarian Awards Dinner


 The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center’s Humanitarian Awards Dinner was themed “the power of one.”


Read Online >


march 12, 2013

Skokie Patch | Illinois Holocaust Museum Honors Three Humanitarians


The Skokie museum honored J.B. Pritzker, Bill Brodsky and Linda Johnson Rice during its annual fundraising dinner.


Read Online >


march 11, 2013

Skokie Review | Power of Three: Holocaust Museum Dinner Honors Humanitarians


The “power of one” comes in all shapes and sizes, but the concept has a universal connection: All those who reflect it stand up for what is right and create a ripple effect in so doing.


Read Online >


march 7, 2013

Crain's Chicago Business | Brodsky, Rice, Pritzker feted by Holocaust museum


Fifteen hundred guests, dozens of A-list CEOs and a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist packed the Hyatt Regency for the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center's fundraiser Wednesday night.


Read Online >


march 1, 2013

TWO MOMS, A LITTLE TIME, AND A KEYBOARD | Illinois Holocaust Museum: Exhibits that Speak to the Children


The Illinois Holocaust Museum uses various exhibits to relate the messages learned from the Holocaust to other events that have happened or are happening today.


Read Online >


February 28, 2013

TWO MOMS, A LITTLE TIME, AND A KEYBOARD | The Illinois Holocaust Museum: An Important Journey


We are very lucky to live an area with many resources that aid our children (and ourselves) as we learn about life, the world, and our place in it.

 

Read Online >


February 26, 2013

GOOD NEWS SKOKIE | What 8th Grade Students Can Learn at the Holocaust Museum


On a recent Friday morning I had the extraordinary good luck to accompany a group of  Middle School 8th graders to the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center off Golf Road and Edens Highway in northern Skokie.

 

Read Online >


February 12, 2013

Skokie Review  | The Power of Staying Behind


When a government worker told Carl Wilkens to talk to Jean Kambanda about saving the 60 children in a Kigali orphanage from the Hutu militia, Wilkens could scarcely believe his ears.

 

Read Online >


February 8, 2013

Chicago Tribune  | Holocaust Museum's message: Don't bully


The little girl is only 8, and so she does not yet read newspapers or watch or listen to the local news.

 

Read Online >


February 7, 2013

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum explores lesser-known origins of Brown v. Board of Education


The “sanctioned” history of the Supreme Court’s 1954 landmark decision, Brown v. Board of Education, hasn’t always been easy for Joseph A. De Laine Jr. and his sister, Ophelia De Laine Gona to hear.

 

Read Online >


February 6, 2013

WBEZ | Holocaust Museum Depicts Life Before Racial Integration


As an African-American born during World War II, when the subject is race, I’m always interested in the many stories that have not been told.

 

Read Online >


February 1, 2013

Make It Better | 5 Things to Do: February 1-3


We're celebrating this month with outdoor adventures, theatrics and cultural outings.

 

Read Online >


january 29, 2013

Down With Film Blog  | Trailer: Skokie: Invaded, But Not Forgotten


This documentary covers the town of Stokie, Illnois, which in 1977, had the largest percentage of holocaust survivors in the U.S

 

Read Online >


january 29, 2013

Examiner | 'Courage' Exhibit at IL Holocaust Museum - a tribute, but an end to segregation?


There continues to be a need for dialogue on issues of schooling and race that still confront America.

 

Read Online >


january 29, 2013

Medill News | Illinois Holocaust Museum connects the dots of genocide


Rather than dwelling on history, the Illinois Holocaust Museum honored the 68th anniversary of Auschwitz’s liberation by focusing on a more recent genocide -- in the Central African nation of Rwanda.

 

Read Online >


january 29, 2013

Chicago Tribune | Holocaust survivor, reunited with sister, is now a U.S. citizen


Adam Paluch, 73, was one of the first candidates to arrive Monday at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services building downtown.

 

Read Online >


january 26, 2013

Daily Herald | Moving Picture: Mundelein Holocaust survivor finds past


It took 45 years, but Adam Paluch finally found out who he was.

 

Read Online >


january 25, 2013

TimeOut Chicago | ‘Courage’ Exhibit Coming to Illinois Holocaust Museum


The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center will commence Black History Month with the exhibition "COURAGE: The Vision to End Segregation, The Guts to Fight For It" on February 3.

 

Read Online >


january 24, 2013

Chicago Tonight | New Film Explores Skokie's Battle with Neo-Nazis


A new documentary airing on WTTW explores the explosive moment when a group of neo-Nazis sought to march in Skokie, Illinois in 1979 – and the landmark legal drama that ensued.

 

Read Online >


january 22, 2013

Chicago Sun-Times | ‘Invaded But Not Conquered’ documents Skokie neo-Nazi uproar


One of the many ways to divide time in Skokie is to look at life before and after the neo-Nazis tried to march downtown.

 

Read Online >


january 22, 2013

Skokie Review | Reflections on Skokie’s neo-Nazi march attempt


Filmmaker Todd Whitman admits that he could have made a much longer documentary on the neo-Nazis’ attempted 1977 and 1978 march in Skokie.

 

Read Online >


january 21, 2013

Chicago Tribune | Screening "Skokie: Invaded but not Conquered"


The story of Skokie and the way it rallied a community, a region and a state to stand up to the racism of neo-Nazism is told once again in a new documentary that takes a fresh look at old wounds.

 

Read Online >


january 18, 2013

Chicago Jewish News | Invaded but Not Conquered


Aaron Elster still remembers what it felt like in 1978 when Nazis wanted to march in his hometown of Skokie.

 

Read Online >


january 16, 2013

Chicago Tribune | Reawakening the ghosts of Skokie


To me, a kid growing up in the 1960s and '70s, Skokie seemed like any other suburb, its tidy houses sitting on impeccably manicured lawns.

 

Read Online >


december 30, 2012

Chicago Sun-Times | ‘Spies’ exhibit in Skokie recounts the fear among us


With the CIA hogging the spotlight these days — think “Homeland” and the Petraeus scandal — it seems only right to make time for the exhibition “Spies, Traitors and Saboteurs” at the Illinois Holocaust Museum.

 

Read Online >


december 26, 2012

TimeOut Chicago | Skokie film recalls Nazi march that didn’t happen


In 1977, the National Socialist Party of America applied for a permit to hold a rally in north suburban Skokie, whose large Jewish population included thousands of survivors of the Holocaust.

 

Read Online >


december 10, 2012

Skokie Review | Survivors Meet in Skokie after more than 60 years


Chabad rabbis from many of the 35 Chabad Houses throughout Illinois gathered Sunday to witness the long-anticipated and historic first-time meeting of two men who survived the Holocaust in the Czestochowa concentration camp in Poland during 1944 as young boys.

 

Read Online >


november 26, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Survivors become important teachers at museum


Cipora Katz of Skokie has the rapt attention of the 10 or so students who sit around a table in the basement of the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.

 

Read Online >


november 18, 2012

Evanston Review | Students hear first-hand genocide lessons


Since 1990, all public and elementary schools in Illinois have been required to teach the Holocaust, the first state to adopt such a mandate.

 

Read Online >


november 15, 2012

Northbrook Star | Kristallnacht ceremony highlights light in dark world


Out of recognition of the darkest of nights comes celebration of light.

 

Read Online >


october 9, 2012

Skokie Review | Argentine ambassador makes historic Holocaust Museum visit


Like the Illinois Holocaust Museum itself, the Oct. 8 visit by the Argentine ambassador to the United States became not just about exploring the past but also about addressing the present.

 

Read Online >


september 14, 2012

Chicago Sun-Times | ‘Cultural ambassadors’ make sure your visit, tours are top-notch


Chicago is chock-full of world-class art and architecture that isn’t always appreciated to the fullest — or, in some cases, at all.

 

Read Online >


august 9, 2012

TimeOut Chicago | Exhibit A


“Spies, Traitors and Saboteurs: Fear and Freedom in America” packs its twisting displays with U.S. history’s dark moments—foreign-born attacks long forgotten (the Black Tom bombing in New Jersey) or still haunting (9/11).

 

Read Online >


august 1, 2012

Chicago Tribune | Elie Wiesel a beacon for human rights 


For more than 50 years, Elie Wiesel has provided a moral compass for the world.

 

Download Article >


JULY 23, 2012

Skokie Review | Polish 'upstander' Honored at Holocaust Museum in Skokie


The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s outdoor Fountain of the Righteous represents a collection of inspirational stories about the difference one person can make in the world.

 

Read Online >


JULY 20, 2012

Polish Daily News | The Righteous Among the Nations


Consul General of Israel to the County of the Midwest, Orli Gil, honored posthumously Pole Catherine Moroz highest Israeli award "Righteous Among the Nations."

 

Read Online >


JULY 18, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum in Skokie opens thought-provoking exhibit


Where were you on that infamous day when New York Harbor came under attack by those looking to harm the country from within?

 

Read Online >


JULY 18, 2012

Skokie Review | Curator oversees sacred collection at Skokie museum 


Visitors who tour the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s permanent exhibition see nearly 500 collection pieces from beginning to end.

 

Read Online >

 

JULY 16, 2012

Travel Digest of the Wisconsin State Journal | Travel digest: Terrorism and civil rights, Taking up space


The International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C., lends its expertise to a new exhibit at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center in Skokie, Ill.

 

Read Online >


JULY 7, 2012

TimeOut Chicago | I Spy


Explore this educational creation of the International Spy Museum.

 

Read Online >

 

JULY 5, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum takes on provocative subject


The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center could not have picked a more provocative subject for its latest traveling exhibition.

 

Read Online >

 

June 29, 2012

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | Illinois Holocaust Museum announces Spies, Traitors, And Saboteurs. Fear And Freedom In America exhibition


Most Americans remember the moment they learned that terrorists had attacked the United States on September 11, 2001, and regard that day’s events as a turning point that forever altered their sense of security.

Read Online >

 

June 29, 2012

CS | With Honors


More than 1,700 Chicago Business and civic leaders, community members and Holocaust Survivors gathered at the Hyatt Regency Chicago for the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center's Humanitarian Awards Dinner. (See p. 150)

 

Read Online >

 

June 18, 2012

Global Jewish Advocacy Newsletter | The Big Story


Nearly 20 diplomats from Chicago’s Consulates attended an event last week that examined the actions of the Third Reich’s Foreign Ministry and contemporary examples of ethical diplomatic dilemmas.

 

Read Online >

 

June 13, 2012

Chicago Sister Cities | GOTHENBURG: A Tribute to Raoul Wallenberg Recap


On June 5 2012, the Gothenburg Committee of Chicago Sister Cities International supported a ceremony to honor the Swedish diplomat and humanitarian Raoul Wallenberg for his courage and actions that saved thousands of Jewish lives in Hungary 1944.


Read Online >

 

June 5, 2012

Evanston Review | Holocaust Museum: Film explores last survivor generation


When someone drives or walks by the big building at 908 Argyle St. in Chicago, they’re not likely to take much notice.


Read Online >

 

June 1, 2012

Skokie Patch | Documentary Sheds Light on Central European Refugees, Holocaust Survivors


In the late 1930's groups of German Jewish refugees fled Europe as it was on the brink of the Holocaust and came to Chicago. A portion of this population founded the Selfhelp Home, a retirement home for elderly jews, in 1938.


Read Online >

 

May 30, 2012

NBC 5 Chicago | Obama's "Death Camp" Remark a Teachable Moment: Museum Director


President Barack Obama used the phrase "Polish Death Camp" while presenting a posthumous award to a Polish World War II hero who tried to warn the world about Nazi executions in Poland. Dick Johnson reports.


Watch & Read Online >

 

May 30, 2012

Medill Reports Chicago | Chicago set to remember Swedish humanitarian who saved thousands from Nazis


By the end of 1944, 11-year-old Agnes Schwartz had lost everything.


Read Online >

 

May 27, 2012

The Times | Illinois Holocaust Museum exhibit shares Jewish part in American war effort


Roger Salamon still remembers the words he heard during his army infantry training in March 1945.


Read Online >

 

May 21, 2012

Crain's Chicago Business | When giving crosses faith lines

 

John Canning Jr. isn't Catholic. He isn't even religious.
 

Read Online >

 

May 18, 2012

Skokie Review | Jewish World War II vets tell of battle experiences

 

“War. You can’t describe the damage it does, and you have no idea how scary it is to be in a war.”


Read Online >

 

May 4, 2012

ABC7 News | Mayor Emanuel, survivors mark Holocaust Remembrance Day

 

Dignitaries, students and survivors gathered at the Illinois Holocaust Museum for Holocaust Remembrance Day.
 

Watch & Read Online >

 

May 1, 2012

JUF News | Holocaust museum exhibit showcases the American Jews who served in WWII

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center's latest special exhibition offers a glimpse into a familiar topic through an unfamiliar perspective: that of American Jewish soldiers who served in WWII.

 

Read Online >

 

April 23, 2012

Skokie Review | Early years a tireless effort

 

“We have not wasted a minute.”

 

Read Online >

 

April 23, 2012

Skokie Review | Group marks Remembrance Day, anniversary

 

There came a time when Holocaust survivor and Anti-Defamation League National Director Abraham Foxman stopped asking why.

 

Read Online >

 

April 18, 2012

Journal Online | A Day For Survivors

 

There are some memories that last a lifetime. And there are some memories that can haunt you forever.

 

Read Online >

 

March 28, 2012

Chicago Tribune | Hidden Holocaust exhibit a simple watercolor, until you flip it over

 

Illinois Holocaust Museum: At this thought-provoking museum, visitors follow a path that leads them from an explanation of the earliest stirrings of the Holocaust, through the genocide and then the aftermath.

 

Read Online >

 

March 27, 2012

Daily Herald | Illinois Holocaust Museum honors civic leaders at awards dinner

 

Secretary of Defense (2006-2011) Robert M. Gates joined nearly 2,000 of Chicago’s foremost civic, business and charitable leaders, community members, local Holocaust survivors and museum patrons at the Hyatt Regency Chicago Tuesday, March 6, to celebrate the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center and to honor four individuals at its 2012 Humanitarian Awards Dinner.

 

Read Online >

 

March 12, 2012

Chicago Sun-Times | Humanitarian honorees

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s Board of Trustees, along with more than 1,800 supporters, gathered last week at the Hyatt Regency, 151 E. Wacker, for the 2012 Humanitarian Awards Dinner featuring former U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates as keynote speaker.

 

Read Online >

 

March 11, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Defense Secretary Gates weighs in on Iranian threat

 

Former Secretary of State Robert Gates’ assessment of the threat posed by Iran and the current state of the Middle East came with no sugar coating.

 

Read Online >

 

March 11, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum honors Skokie teacher’s work in Ghana

 

Emmanuel may have been the first to capture Shelley Nizynski Reese’s heart but he certainly wasn’t the last.

 

Read Online >

 

March 9, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum raises $2.2 million for its mission

 

Attended by 1,700 people including dignitaries from Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel to Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and with a keynote address from former Secretary of State Robert M. Gates, the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center March 6 raised more than $2.2 million at its annual Humanitarian Awards Dinner.

 

Read Online >

 

March 9, 2012

Skokie Review | A glimpse of Ghana and its people

 

There are as many or more preventable deaths in Ghana as there are anywhere in the world, Shelley Nizynski Reese has said.

 

Read Online >

 

March 8, 2012

Crain's | Holocaust Museum award allows Michael Rubinstein a pass on anniversary gift

 

When Michael Rubinstein took to the stage at the Illinois Holocaust Museum's awards dinner Tuesday night, he noted that the affair conflicted with his 29th wedding anniversary.

 

Read Online >

 

March 8, 2012

Skokie Patch | Local Jewish Vets Honored at Holocaust Museum

 

The touring exhibit of “Ours to Fight For: American Jews in the Second World War” - on display at Skokie’s Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center through June 21 – is so compelling museum officials wouldn’t dare alter its layout.


Read Online >

 

March 6, 2012

Chicago Sun-Times | Holocaust museum honors three Chicago execs

 

On Tuesday night, the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center will host its annual Humanitarian Awards dinner to honor Neil Bluhm, president, JMB Realty Corp.; Don Thompson, president and COO, McDonald’s Corp., and Rick Waddell, chairman and CEO, Northern Trust, for outstanding civic leadership and support of the IHMEC.


Read Online >

 

March 5, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum honors Skokie teacher

 

If ever there was an award tailor made for someone, the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s new Power Of One Award — celebrating the difference one person can make in the world — has to be it.


Read Online >

 

March 1, 2012

Chicago Tribune | 'Ours to Fight For' tells stories of Jews who served in WWII

 

Those of an anti-Semitic bent had a definite opinion about Jews' joining the U.S. militaryto fight in World War II.


Read Online >

 

February 24, 2012

Chicago Jewish News | GI Jews

 

When 88-year-old Chicago-area veteran Mort Oman viewed “Ours to Fight For: AmericanJews in the Second World War,” the new exhibition at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center in Skokie, he had a visceral reaction.


Read Online >

 

February 20, 2012

Trib Local | Exhibition Public Opening at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center

 

"Ours to Fight For- Amercian Jews in the Second World War" exhibit opened to the public on Feburary 19 at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie, Illinois.


Read Online >

 

February 20, 2012

Skokie Review | Museum sought World War II exhibit years ago

 

When Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center leaders first wanted to bring “Ours To Fight For: American Jews in the Second World War” to Skokie, there were a couple of challenges.


Read Online >

 

February 20, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Voices of veterans drive exhibit

 

 It may be more instructive to begin with what you will not find in the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s traveling exhibition about Jewish World War II veterans.


Read Online >

 

February 16, 2012

Crain's Chicago Business | 10 Things to Do this Weekend

 

EXAMINE. The "OURS TO FIGHT FOR: AMERICAN JEWS IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR" special exhibit opens this weekend at the Illinois Holocaust Museum.


Read Online >

 

February 13, 2012

WTTW | Stanley Tigerman

 

Architect Stanley Tigerman discusses the Illinois Holocaust Museum project.


Watch Online >

 

February 6, 2012

The Columbia Chronicle | Jewish World War II Veterans Remembered

 

In just a matter of weeks, the collective voices of more than 400 World War II veterans will tell their stories in an exhibition meant to encapsulate the realities of a pivotal time in history.


Read Online >

 

january 24, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Jewish World War II vets drive new exhibit

 

More than 400 voices are behind the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s forthcoming comprehensive exhibition exploring American Jews who fought in World War II.


Read Online >

 

january 20, 2012

Chicago Jewish News | Pennies in Memory

 

On Sunday, Jan. 29, BEANS USY (Beth El at North Suburban Synagogue United Synagogue Youth) of Highland Park will present a donation of 1.5 million pennies ($15,000) to the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.


Read Online >

 

january 19, 2012

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Landmark play asks big moral questions

 

“It is not only Ernst Janning that is put on trial here. It is the German people.”


Read Online >

 

january 13, 2012

Dupage Regional Office of Education | International Holocaust Remembrance Day

 

The United Nations has designated January 27th as International Holocaust Remembrance Day.


Read Online >

 

january 3, 2012

Huffington Post | The Sound Of Silence: Resolving To Speak Out In 2012

 

Even as the New Year has come and gone, change, often avoided or dismissed, becomes an overwhelming motivator.


Read Online >

 

december 21, 2011

Wilmette Life | Graphic novel art reawakens survivor stories

 

Their stories are told in a variety of ways — through old photographs and film, eyewitness testimony and meticulously installed summary panels, an upper floor art gallery and a lower floor space for traveling exhibitions.


Read Online >

 

december 5, 2011

Elm Leaves | River Grove Students visit Holocaust Museum

 

A group of River Grove School students visited Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie last month and learned about bullying and the Holocaust.


Read Online >

 

november 23, 2011

East Peoria Times Courier | EPCHS Students Travel for Holocaust Lesson

 

Eight East Peoria Community High School juniors recently stepped outside their classroom for an important lesson in history.


Read Online >

 

november 17, 2011

JUF News | The Valiant and the Indifferent—Honoring Rescuers, Commemorating Kristallnacht

 

At a special community gathering, the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center contrasted the acts of righteous “upstanders” with the indifference demonstrated during “Kristallnacht,” often referred to as the “Night of Shattered Glass.”


Read Online >

 

november 7, 2011

Chicago Sun Times | Illinois Holocaust Museum,  Jewish escapees honor rescuers

 

Chaya Roth and Gitta Fajerstein-Walchirk have a close bond with a 90-year-old Catholic priest living in a nursing home in Cuneo, Italy.


Read Online >

 

november 7, 2011

Skokie Review | Heroes help mark Kristallnacht anniversary

 

Chaya Roth and Gitta Fajerstein-Walchirk have a close bond with a 90-year-old Catholic priest living in a nursing home in Cuneo, Italy.


Read Online >

 

november 6, 2011

ABC News | Several honored for helping rescue Jews in WWII

 

Three days before the anniversary of Kristallnacht the Illinois Holocaust Museum in suburban Skokie honored people from Italy, Poland and Lithuania who helped rescue Jews during World War II.


Read Online >

Watch Online >

 


OCTOBER 27, 2011

National Parks Magazine | The Art of Gaman

 

“The Art of Gaman: Arts and Crafts of the Japanese American Internment Camps: 1942-1946” was recently exhibited at the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery and is currently traveling the country.


Read Online >

 

OCTOBER 24, 2011

Skokie Review | Museum Fights Against Bullying

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s inaugural all-day Anti-Bullying Forum last week, packed with useful information for educators from throughout the region, seemed to gravitate toward a few repeated points.


Read Online >

 

OCTOBER 24, 2011

Skokie Review | Chicago Schools CEO Weighs in on Bullying

 

“How many of you were subject to bullying while you were in school?” Chicago Public Schools CEO Jean-Claude Brizard raised his hand even if he was the one who posed the question.


Read Online >

 

october 19, 2011

Chicago Tonight | Bullying

 

There is a national push to eradicate bullying. Are schools doing enough to combat the problem? We hear from Dorothy Espelage, one of the nation's top experts on bullying, on Chicago Tonight at 7:00 pm.


Read and Watch Online >

 

OCTOBER 18, 2011

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Enhanced youth exhibit inspires kids to stand up

 

More than two years later, the simplest of words continue to be as meaningful as ever. “Make a difference.”


Read Online >

 

OCTOBER 6, 2011

Trib Local | Families Invited to Day of Kid-friendly Events at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center invites families to celebrate the re-launch of the newly enhanced and expanded Make a Difference! The Miller Family Youth Exhibition with an afternoon of family fun.


Read Online >

 

september 29, 2011

Lincolnwood Review | Other Programs Complement Japanese-American Artworks

 

The Japanese-American population in Chicago stood at about 400 before the bombing of Pearl Harbor. By the time World War II ended and Japanese-American internment camps were dismantled, that population spiked to about 20,000.


Read Online >

 

September 23, 2011

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum Shines Light on Prisoner Art

 

Families were torn apart, businesses and homes were lost, lives were interrupted overnight.


Read Online >

 

September 22, 2011

Chicago Tonight | The Art of Gaman

 

When Japanese-Americans were rounded up and shipped to internment camps in the U.S. during World War II, some of them created art and handiwork to help them cope. Paintings, carvings and sculptures are part of The Art of Gaman exhibition at the Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie, which opens on Sunday.


Read and Watch Online >

 

September 22, 2011

Crain's Chicago Business | 10 Things to Do this Weekend

 

REMEMBER. "THE ART OF GAMAN: ARTS AND CRAFTS FROM THE JAPANESE AMERICAN INTERNMENT CAMPS, 1942- 1946," an exhibit that was on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, opens at the Illinois Holocaust Museum this weekend.


Read Online >

 

September 13, 2011

Lake Forester | New Exhibit displays Japanese Prisoner Art

 

A showcase of arts and crafts made by Japanese American prisoners while interned in the United States from 1942 to 1946 will be featured in a new exhibition this month at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.


Read Online >

 

September 2, 2011

JUF News | Sunday at the Museum

 

Adventures of a Jewish 20-something, by Stefanie Pervos Bregman


Read Online >

 

august 29, 2011

Lincolnwood Review | 'Eleven' Concert at Museum Honors Memory of Sept. 11th Victims


Chicago cabaret artist Joan Curto was excitedly waiting to board a plane at O’Hare Airport for her New York City debut when the flight was abruptly cancelled. It was Sept. 11, 2001.

Read Online >

 

august 24, 2011

TimeOut Chicago | Spots of Light featured in "This Week in Chicago"


A contemporary concept enlivens enthralling stories of women in the Holocaust.

Read Online >

 

july 29, 2011

Chicago Jewish News | To Be a Woman in the Holocaust


The touching and revelatory exhibit -- the first international exhibition to focus exclusively on women and their experiences during the Holocaust -- tells many stories through large-scale projections grouped according to subject matter.

Read Online >

 

july 25, 2011

Skokie Review | Cancer Survivor uses Handbag Art to Heal


As a survivor herself, and as the granddaughter of four Holocaust survivors, Yali Derman makes art to heal.

Read Online >

 

july 25, 2011

Skokie Review | Being a Survivor Examined through the Arts


The three women never met each other nor would that even be possible. One is fictional, the subject of a well-received play by the award-winning Lookingglass Theatre; the second appears in a moving and painful documentary about a son’s search for his mother’s past; and the third emerges as an eloquent Holocaust survivor coming from a history most of us could never imagine.
 

Read Online >

 

july 1, 2011

Skokie Patch | Holocaust Exhibit Spotlights Women's Plight


The imagery of the Holocaust often focuses on the concentration camps, with pictures of groups of emaciated figures with shaved heads and in striped prison uniforms. The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie has taken a different approach in its newest temporary exhibition. "Spots of Light: To Be a Woman in the Holocaust" takes its subjects out of the crowd and drives home the tragedy by displaying beautiful images of some victims.
 

Read Online >

 

july 1, 2011

Lincolnwood Review | Heroic women from Holocaust highlighted in museum exhibit


 Many women who lived during the Holocaust were extraordinary in their own way, their stories a testament to courage and determination in unimaginably horrific times. The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center’s newest traveling exhibition documenting their lives then isn’t about a chronological journey the way some of its previous shows have been.
 

Read Online >

 

June 26, 2011

Daily Herald | Skokie Museum Offers First Look at Women of Holocaust

 

 “Spots of Light: To be a Woman in the Holocaust” opened this week at the Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie.
The exhibit is part of a traveling exhibit from Yad Vashem in Jerusalem.
 

Read Online >

 

June 24, 2011

Crain's Chicago Business | 10 Things to Do this Weekend

 

REMEMBER. The video-art based exhibition, "SPOTS OF LIGHT: TO BE A WOMAN IN THE HOLOCAUST," opens this week at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center.
 

Read Online >

 

June 20, 2011

Lake Michigan Shore | Truth, Tears and Tolerance: Illinois Holocaust Museum pays tribute to victims, honors survivors

 

It all began in the aftermath of the proposed neo-Nazi march on Skokie in the late 1970s. Holocaust survivors living in the area realized they must ensure that the legacy of their horrific experiences is passed on to future generations. It took a while. In 1981, the Holocaust Memorial Foundation of Illinois was established and in 1984, a small museum and resource center opened, making it available to the public, especially schoolchildren, who heard first-hand the personal experiences of Holocaust survivors.

 

Read Online >

 

June 12, 2011

Daily Herald | Women in the Holocaust Exhibit Opens

 

A new exhibit focusing the experiences of women in the Holocaust is opening at the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie.

“Spots of Light: To be a Woman in the Holocaust” is the first international exhibit to focus exclusively on women.

 

Read Online >

 

mAY 24, 2011

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Civil rights giant stays determined to get in the way

 

The former “Freedom Rider” and the last living civil rights leader who spoke at the historic March on Washington rally more than 47 years ago still believes in “getting in the way” to fight injustice in the world.

That’s how U.S. Congressman John Lewis says he has always lived his life, offering that politics is a continuation of the principles that guided him as a leader in the Civil Rights Movement.

 

Read Online > 

 

mAY 11, 2011

Lincolnwood Review | Chicago marks Holocaust Remembrance Day in Skokie 

 

Ever since the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center was built two years ago, Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley has commemorated the city’s Holocaust Remembrance Day there.

 

“Each year, this day serves as a reminder of a tragic time in history that this generation should not be allowed to forget,” city organizers said.

 

Holocaust survivor Beatrice Muchman served as a keynote speaker last week at the ceremony held Thursday in Skokie.

Read Online > 

 

mAY 10, 2011

Skokie Review  | Croatian president quietly visits Holocaust Museum

 

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell was there before the museum even opened.

 

Former President Bill Clinton and Nobel Prize laureate Elie Wiesel spoke and toured the facility on opening day. Rwanda humanitarian Paul Rusesabagina took a tour on a quiet Sunday afternoon.

 

But for all the dignitaries and distinguished guests of the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center over the last two years, no one has been a sitting head of state.

Read Online > 

 

aPRIL 30 / mAY 7

WCIU-The U | Holocaust and Veteran’s Museums

 

In this episode we explore two unique historical institutions that possess thought-provoking exhibits and are located beyond the downtown Museum Campus: The Illinois Holocaust Museum and National Veterans Art Museum.

Watch Online > 

 

mAY 5, 2011

YouTube | Remain Constantly Vigiliant Against Hate Crimes, Mayor Daley Says at 22nd Holocaust Remembrance Day. 

 

Hate crimes and crimes against humanity continue to occur all around the world every day and we must be constantly vigilant to make sure that prejudice and intolerance never obtain a foothold in Chicago, Mayor Richard M. Daley said at ceremonies marking the City's 22nd Holocaust Remembrance Day.


In 1990, Daley started Holocaust Remembrance Day in Chicago in memory of the victims and in honor of the survivors of one of darkest moments in the history of humanity.

 

Watch Online > 

 

MAY 2, 2011

Vocalo 89.5, sister station of Chicago Public Radio | Hear Fritzie Fritzshall’s inspirational story of survival

 

May 2nd is Yom HaShoah, Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day. Fritizie Fritzshall, Holocaust survivor and President of the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie, joined Brian Babylon and Molly Adams of the Morning AMp for an eye-opening conversation. Fritzie shared her story of survival and spoke about the education efforts of the museum.

Listen Online > 


April 23, 2011

The New York Times | Memories of Holocaust, Fortified

 

SKOKIE, Ill. — Before the $45 million Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center opened here two years ago, there was some urgency in completing its 65,000-square-foot building, which now stands so incongruously monumental in the midst of Chicago’s suburban landscape.

Read Online > 


April 13, 2011

ABC 7 News | Condoleezza Rice for the Illinois Holocaust Museum

 

Condoleezza Rice spoke eloquently at our 2011 Humanitarian Awards Dinner about the importance of not treating groups of individuals as "other than us."

Watch Online > 

 

April 13, 2011

Crain's Chicago Business | Holocaust Museum announces $1M scholarship fund in name of Daleys  

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum hosted a fundraising event earlier this week where honoree Michael Sacks and museum campaign chairman J.B. Pritzker announced a nearly $1-million scholarship fund that will benefit Chicago Public School students.

 

Museum executives say the Mayor Richard M. and Maggie C. Daley Education Fund is a fitting tribute to the outgoing mayor, who became emotional Tuesday night when he talked about the importance of telling Holocaust survivors' stories.

Read Online > 

 

April 12, 2011

Illinois Government News Network | Governor Quinn Appoints Members to Illinois Holocaust and Genocide Commission

  

Governor Pat Quinn today appointed nine individuals to serve on the Illinois Holocaust and Genocide Commission. Commission members will work to promote education and awareness of the Holocaust and genocide around the world.

 

“We must never forget the atrocities and horrors of the Holocaust,” said Governor Quinn. “This commission will increase awareness of the Holocaust and other past genocides to make sure that ‘never again’ is not a meaningless slogan.”

Read Online > 

 

march 28, 2011

Chicago Tribune | Hurt by prejudice, healed by unity 

 

Perhaps it is because Gwendolyn DuBose Rogers and her beloved college professor, though raised continents apart, had childhoods scarred by bitter, dehumanizing prejudice.

Or maybe it's that the teaching didn't end after graduation half a century ago but continued right up until Lore May Rasmussen died in 2009 at 88. Read Online > 

 

march 23, 2011

Chicago Sun-Times | Exhibit details WWII era Jewish scholars' impact on black colleges 

 

They were two groups an ocean apart with seemingly little in common — black Southerners living under Jim Crow, seeking a college education, and free-thinking German and Austrian academics under duress in the 1930s.

 

They formed a lifelong commitment to each other after the professors, Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany, gained employment at historically black colleges and universities in the South.

Read Online > 

 

march 22, 2011

WBEZ91.5 | Exhibition presents history of Jewish scholars  teaching at historically black colleges 

 

Shortly after Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, laws were passed barring Jews from working in the public sector. That meant many of the most important minds were tossed out of their jobs at major universities. In response, The Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced German Scholars formed in New York. Within a few years, the Committee brought about 300 professors to the U.S. Nine were hired by The University of Chicago. Listen Online > 

 

march 22, 2011

Make it Better | Illinois Holocaust Museum Anti-Bullying Workshop

 

On March 9th, more than 60 5th and 6th grade students from Chicago and its surrounding suburbs participated in an Anti-Bullying workshop entitled STAND UP! Youth Leadership Day at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.

 

The workshop included museum tours, group activities, and a presentation by a survivor of the war in Bosnia, Nadja Halibegovich, who led her country towards peace by broadcasting music and poetry over the radio. Read Online > 

 

march 21, 2011

Trib Local | Illinois Holocaust Museum Announces 2011 Docent Training Program

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center is pleased to announce that they are now accepting applicants for their 2011 Docent Training Program. This select corps of Docents will be responsible for leading student and adult tours through the Karkomi Permanent Exhibition; Make A Difference: Miller Family Youth Exhibition; Legacy of Absence Art Gallery; and changing special exhibitions. Read Online > 

 

march 21, 2011

Trib Local | Exelon Funds $250,000  Anti-Bullying Initiative

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center has received a $250,000 grant from Exelon Corporation to establish the Museum’s Anti-Bullying Initiative. The new educational program kicked off with a full-day workshop entitled STAND UP! Youth Leadership Day on Wednesday, March 9. A program of the Miller Family Youth Exhibition, over 60 fifth and sixth grade students participated, traveling to the museum from Chicago and surrounding suburbs, Rockford, and Northwest Indiana. Read Online > 

 

march 14, 2011

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Ambitious programming fulfills IHMEC mission 

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center turns two years old next month, having opened during the same month designated as Genocide Awareness Month and on the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. 

 

After two years, the museum and education facility continues to fulfill its mission, not only as a sacred place where memories and history are preserved but as a learning ground to try to educate and prevent future genocide. Read Online >

 

march 10, 2011

Jewish Exponent | Debating Museums' Future in Shaky Times

 

The state and stature of American Jewish museums was "Exhibit A" last week at the annual conference of the institutions' directors and programmers, held at the spanking new National Museum of American Jewish History. 

 

Gathered at the museum on Independence Mall -- with tours and side trips to such nearby sites as the Constitution Center and Temple Judea Museum at Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel in Elkins Park -- more than 200 delegates of the Council of American Jewish Museums delved into such topics as curating and collecting, as well as the "strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats" facing the institutions. Read Online >

 

march 9, 2011

Chicago Tribune |  Helping Museum Workers Collect Know-How 

 

For many of the students in Arielle Weininger's class in museum collection practices, the issues are more than academic.



Part of a certificate program in artifact collection care that began last fall at the University of Chicago's Graham School of General Studies, the class has attracted volunteers, interns and employees from museums and archives across the Chicago area.  Read Online >

 

march 7, 2011

Chicago Tribune |  On the town: Upcoming events

 

A compelling story is explored in the exhibition "Beyond Swastika and Jim Crow: Jewish Refugee Scholars at Black Colleges" at the Illinois Holocaust Museum. The story is about Jewish scholars who fled Nazi Germany for the United States, and became professors at historically black colleges in the South. Read Online >

 

February 25, 2011

Chicago Tribune | Exhibit Explores Jewish and African-American connections at HBCUs

 

A compelling story is explored in the exhibition "Beyond Swastika and Jim Crow: Jewish Refugee Scholars at Black Colleges" at the Illinois Holocaust Museum. The story is about Jewish scholars who fled Nazi Germany for the United States, and became professors at historically black colleges in the South.  

 

The exhibition looks at how shared racial persecution shaped relationships between the Jewish instructors and African-American students.  Read Online >

 

February 24, 2011

Time Out Chicago | "Beyond Swastika and Jim Crow" at Illinois Holocaust Museum 

 

A sign—jews not welcome—hangs over a German college’s gate; a U.S. association for Realtors document discourages home sales to certain races; a New York union broadside espouses anti-immigrant policy. Using these and other artifacts, Illinois Holocaust Museum paints a picture of a perverted era: Jewish professors—kicked out of German colleges—emigrated to the U.S. during WWII and gladly found jobs at black universities in the Jim Crow South. Read Online >

 

February 7, 2011

Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum : Exhibit tells little known-story of Jewish and Black history

 

Scholar Ernst Borinski and many just like him led two very different and distinguished lives by the time their careers ended. Before 1939, German-born Borinski studied law, the humanities and arts at multiple universities. He clerked in the Prussian High Court, served as a judicial officer and worked for a private company on labor law issues.

 

But Borinski was Jewish, and when the Nazis marched into Austria in 1938, he left his homeland and found himself in America trying to create a new life.  Read Online >

 

January 31, 2001

Daily Herald | Holocaust museum examines Jewish persecution and Jim Crow


A new exhibit at the Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie, “Beyond Swastika and Jim Crow,” explores the unlikely coming together of these two groups, each the object of exclusion and hatred, and examines the ongoing encounter between them as they navigated the challenges of life in the segregated South.

Through historical objects, photographs, texts and artworks such as “The Gleaners” by John Biggers, visitors learn the stories of two disenfranchised groups brought together in search of opportunity and freedom.  Read Online >


Skokie Review | Holocaust Museum: Exhibit describes refugee Jewish scholars at black colleges

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center's newest traveling exhibition tells the under-reported story of German-Jewish refugee scholars expelled from their homeland by the Nazis who found new lives at historically black colleges in the American South.

"Beyond Swastika and Jim Crow: Jewish Refugee Scholars at Black Colleges," scheduled to open Friday, is further indication of how this invaluable facility in Skokie places a high priority on the "education" part of its mission.  Read Online >

 

January 28, 2011

Trib Local | Illinois Holocaust Museum Commemorates 66th Anniversary of the Liberation of Auschwitz

To mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center hosted renowned scholar Robert Jan van Pelt on January 27 for a full-day, interactive workshop. During the program,"Auschwitz: Inside the Nazi State,” van Pelt led close to one hundred midwest educators through a detailed exploration of the decision-making process of the Nazis, the various stages of the development of Auschwitz, and the moral "gray zone" that existed inside this infamous camp.  Read More >

 

January 27, 2011

Trib Local | A Call to Action on International Holocaust Remembrance Day 

 

“Inherent in authentic remembrance is vigilance and action. More often than not, remembrance has been bereft of such crucial components. Memory can be a graveyard, but it can also be the true kingdom of man.” 

 

These words, so eloquently spoken by Nobel Laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, address the pledge that our generation and future generations must undertake to uphold the torch of remembrance and accept the legacy bestowed upon us.

 

Today marks the sixty-sixth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, with commemorations across the globe in observance of International Holocaust Remembrance Day.  Read More >




November 15, 2010

Lincolnwood Review | Museum president reflects on anniversary 

 

Every Nov. 9, the anniversary of the Nazis' unleashed attack on Jewish businesses, synagogues and homes in pre-World War II Germany, Fritzie Fritzshall remembers. She remembers her three lives.

 

"That's how I look at it," says the president of the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center on the 72nd anniversary of Kristallnacht. "There was before, during and after."  Read More >

 

November 8, 2010

Winnetka Talk | Program recalls horrors of 1938's Kristallnacht

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center will commemorate Kristallnacht Tuesday night for the second time since the facility opened in April 2009.

 

Kristallnacht or "Night of Broken Glass" marked a series of attacks against Jewish people throughout Germany and parts of Austria over two days on Nov. 9 and 10, 1938.  Read More >

 

October 31, 2010

Daily Herald | 'We knew one line was going to the gas chamber'
Auschwitz survivor heads exhibit that highlights holocaust horrors

 

Josef Mengele died in 1979 but he lives on in Fritzie Fritzshall's nightmares: He's the unsmiling Angel of Death, peering at lines of naked Auschwitz prisoners and callously choosing who would live and who die.

 

"We had to walk undressed sometimes every single day, sometimes every two days, sometimes twice a day," said Fritzshall, a Buffalo Grove resident and board president of the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center in Skokie. She arrived at Auschwitz in 1944.  Read More >

 

October 25, 2010

Skokie Patch | Students Urged to Fight Bullying Scourge
Skokie seminar has Holocaust survivors sharing their life-and-death tales during the Nazi tyranny

 

From Independence, IA, to Joliet, IL, 110 high school students recently convened in Skokie to learn about standing up against bullying, leadership and diversity. The event takes on greater significance following highly publicized reports of bullying across the nation, said Rachel Hellenga, director of program services at the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.  Read More >

 

August 11, 2010

Illinois Marks $15 Million US Contribution to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation in Poland at Museum
The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center welcomed the Polish Consul General, Zygmunt Matynia, and three members of the Illinois Congressional Delegation, Reps. Luis V. Gutierrez, Jan Schakowsky and Mike Quigley at an event to mark a $15 million grant to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation to preserve the memory of the Holocaust. The grant, announced by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in July, resulted in part from a Congressional effort, led by Rep. Gutierrez, to urge the President and the Secretary to fund the preservation of the museum marking the epicenter of the Holocaust.  Read More >  Press Release >

 

July 15, 2010

Governor signs legislation creating statewide Genocide Commission at Illinois Holocaust Museum

 

100 State Legislators, Holocaust and Genocide Survivors, Museum and Community Leaders Join Governor Quinn at Bill Signing Ceremony  Read More >

 

News Coverage:
Skokie Review
| New genocide commission becomes law  Read Online >
TribLocal
| Quinn's bill sets Holocaust commission  Read Online >


June 24, 2010

Deadly Medicine: Creating the Master Race to Open at IHMEC in July

 

Museum Hosts Film Series and Special Guest Speakers – Including Stars of TLC’s “Little People, Big World” – to Coordinate with Travelling Exhibition About Nazi Eugenics  Read More >  Learn more about Deadly Medicine >

 

June 14, 2010

His Excellency Ichiro Fujisaki, Ambassador of Japan to the United States, visited the Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center.  Ambassador Fujisaki was joined by his wife, Mrs. Yoriko Fujisaki.  The Consul General of Japan in Chicago, Mr. George Hisaeda, and his wife, Mrs. Midori Hisaeda, also accompanied the Ambassador.  Read More >

 

May 4, 2010 | Mayor Daley hosts City of Chicago Annual Holocaust Commemoration at IHMEC >

The City of Chicago’s annual Holocaust Remembrance Day public ceremony was held Thursday, May 6, 2010 with Nazi concentration camp survivor, John Macsai, as the keynote speaker this year. Read More >  Press Release > 

 

News Coverage: Trib Local | Illinois Holocaust Museum hosts Day of Remembrance >

 

April 20, 2010 | Museum Celebrates One Year Anniversary >

Series of events celebrates Museum's first year | CBS 2 News | ABC | Journal Gazette
Skokie Review | Stanley Speaks about the Museum's Architecture Read Now >

 

April 15, 2010 | Fritzie Fritzshall, IHMEC President, addresses the Governor’s Yom Hashoah Commemoration in Springfield

The State Journal-Register, Springfield, IL | Auschwitz Survivor Speaks to State Holocaust Observance Read Now >

 

April 9, 2010 >

Chicago Tribune | The Museum encourages Naperville teen in effort to name the victims of the Holocaust.  Read Now >

 

April 7, 2010 >

Museum Surpasses 100,000 Visitors: Students from Chicago International Charter School - Basil Campus accounted for the 100,000th visitor to the museum on Wednesday, April 7, 2010. The students each received a "100 Grand" candy bar and a museum t-shirt.  The school library was given a copy of Memory and Legacy. Read More >  View Pictures >

 

March 24, 2010 | Exhibit, The Wartime Escape, Opens >

Chicago Sun Times | The brave escape of Curious George: Exhibit shows how author, illustrator dodged Holocaust  Read Now >
CBS2 Chicago
| Holocaust Museum Honors Curious George Creators  Read Now >
Shalom Life | Holocaust Museum Features Curious George  Read Now >


March 11, 2010

Pioneer Press | Awards dinner honors museum's first year Read More>

The News Tribune, Seattle-Tacoma | Teacher, attendee of Museum seminar, featured in local newspaper Read More >

 

March 10, 2010 >

State's Attorney Alvarez Announces Hate Crimes Initiatives at Museum: Announcement renewed efforts in the fight against hate crimes in Cook County.  Learn More >

 

March 9, 2010 >

Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center Honors Three Leaders with Humanitarian Awards; Tom Brokaw Keynotes Gala  Read More >

 

March 1, 2010 >

Midwest Construction | Bully & Andrews brings Muchin College Prep Students and Illinois Holocaust Museum Together  Read More >

 

January 7, 2010 >

Pioneer Press | Winnetka Teen gets Ho Feng Shan honored on the Museum Fountain of the Righteous  Read More >

 

January 2010 >

Chicago Magazine | Action Heroes: Chicagoans of the Year 2009: Sam Harris Read the Article >

 


December 13, 2009 >

Southtown Star | Local Police Recruits Learn Lessons from the Holocaust Read More >
The Island Packet | Righteous Gentiles are really true Heroes Read More>
Arizona Daily Star | Proposed “Museum of Tolerance” in Arizona looks to IHMEC for model Read More >

December 12, 2009 >

Daily Herald | Traveling Anne Frank exhibit puts face on horror of Holocaust Read More >

 

December 11, 2009 >

Dani Froelich screens "Life Lessons" at Illinois Holocaust Museum Read More >

December 8, 2009 >
Daily Herald | Student Leadership Days: Muslim leader's tells teens everyone, at some point, is asked to stand up Read More >
November 22, 2009 >

Washington Post | Near Chicago, the Holocaust's lessons resonate Read More >

November 19, 2009 >

120 People become US Citizens in Special Naturalization Ceremony at Illinois Holocaust Museum.  Read More >

Pioneer Press | New U.S. citizens sworn in at Holocaust Museum Read Now >
Chicago Breaking News
| New citizens proud to join America's 'good society' Read Now >

November 11, 2009 >

Loyola Pheonix | Ralph Rehbock tells his story at Loyola University  Read More >

November 9, 2009 >

Skokie Review | Kristallnacht ceremony honors 'righteous'  Read More >

November 5, 2009 >
Museum to present the traveling exhibition Anne Frank: A History for Today from Dec. 3-Feb. 28, 2010  Read More >


October 27, 2009 >
Pioneer Press | Educators study non-Jewish Nazi atrocities  Read Now >

October 26, 2009 >

Yad Vashem and IHMEC sign cooperation agreement.  They commit to a close and cooperative relationship in the areas of education, commemoration, and publications.  Read More Now >

October 19, 2009 >

The Northwest Indiana Times features the museum and its available resources for teachers.  Read Now >

October 14, 2009 >
Menachem Wecker of the Jewish Press discusses why America needs the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center.  Read Now >
September 18, 2009 >

Pioneer Presss | The first traveling exhibition opened at the museum, "Darfur: Photojournalists Respond."  Survivors from the Sudanese community provided enlightening and extraordinary testimony about how they survived and how they have come to flourish in a new country as refugees.  Read Now >

 

AUGUST 23, 2009 >
Daily Herald | Skokie Holocaust museum holds conference for law enforcement  Read Now >


 
August 18, 2009 >
Voice of America | Illinois Museum Teaches Police Recruits About Holocaust  Read Now >
Voice of America | Watch Video Coverage of the Program Watch Now >

August 16, 2009 > 

Chicago Tribune | A cop course about heart  Read Now >

August 13, 2009 >

WBEZ Eight Forty-Eight | Executive Director, Richard S. Hirschhaut explains the "Law Enforcement and Democracy Initiative"  Listen Online >

August 14, 2009 >
Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center and Anti-Defamation League Launch “Law Enforcement and Democracy Initiative” | Read More Now >

July 7, 2009 >
Pioneer Press | Horror of loss subject of Holocaust Museum art gallery Read Now >

Pioneer Press | Inaugural Golder Family Community Forum engages large audience on topic of extremism | Read now >

June 30, 2009 >
Pioneer Press | Rwandan hero gets warm welcome at Holocaust Museum Read Now >

June 11, 2009 >

IHMEC Responds to Shooting at U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum

Security heightened at the museum.
Statement from Executive Director, Richard Hirschhaut | Read now >
Michael Berenbaum responds on the Jewish Daily Forward website | Read now >

June 11, 2009 >

Pioneer Press: Survivor of Holocaust to speak in Kenilworth

Aaron Elster speaks about his childhood experiences in the Holocaust in Kenilworth.  Read online now >

April 2, 2009 >

Chicago Tribune: Illinois Holocaust Museum: Grand Opening Nears in Skokie

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell, Gov. Pat Quinn, Holocaust survivors and 2,000 others are expected to attend a sold-out gala Thursday night at the llinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center in Skokie.
Read online now >

May 28, 2009 >
Chicago Tribune: Horror and heroism featured at new Holocaust museum  Read Now >

may 14, 2009 >
McCormick Freedom Museum Author Series: Thomas Buergenthal, A Lucky Child
Listen to the Podcast Online Now >
Thomas Buergenthal spent his childhood in World War II concentration camps.  Miraculously, he survived Auschwitz, the death marches and countless close calls, and is still alive to tell his story today.
The Freedom Museum proudly co-hosted this program with the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie, Illinois.

May 6, 2009 >
Chicago ABC: Mayor Daley marks Holocaust Remembrance Day at llinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center Read Now >

Coverage of the Museum Opening >
May 12, 2009 | Angella Nazarian, Huffington Post: Voice of Hope Read now >
April 21, 2009 | Pioneer Press: Holocaust Museum: Seminar guests decry state of genocide reporting Read now >
April 21, 2009
| Art Bistro: Illinois Holocaust Museum Art Galleries Gives History its Due Read now>
April 20, 2009 | The Washington Post:  There Will Be Generations, Eboo Patel  Read now >
April 20, 2009 | Chicago Tribune: Bill Clinton featured at opening event Read now >
April 19, 2009 | New York Times: Holocaust Museum Lets Local Voices Memorialize Read now >
April 19, 2009 | Chicago Sun-Times: Wiesel, Clinton revisit horrors, while a 'grandma' speaks of love Read now >
April 18, 2009 | Wall Street Journal: Holocaust Survivors' Protest Still Echoes in Illinois Suburb  Read now >
April 16, 2009 | WBEZ Radio: A Holocaust Survivor Hands Off Her Story  Listen now >
April 16, 2009 | Chicago Tribune: Sunday's opening in Skokie to have powerful message of hope amid the horrors  Read now >

April 2, 2009 >

Professor Elie Wiesel to Speak at Public Grand Opening April 19, 2009

Esteemed author, activist and Holocaust survivor to join President Bill Clinton, Senator Richard Durbin, Governor Pat Quinn and several thousand guests for opening of new museum.  Read the Press Release Now >

March 24, 2009 >

President Bill Clinton to Keynote Grand Opening April 19, 2009

Former U.S. President to join Governor Quinn and thousands of guests as local Holocaust survivors Witness their Dream Revealed for the first time.  Read the Press Release Now >

March 21, 2009 >

Chicago Tribune recognizes IHMEC tribute to Chiune Sugihara

Chiune Sugihara, a Japanese Diplomat during WWII, is one of many rescuers featured in the museum.  Richard Salomon helped secure Japanese documents to tell Sugihara's story and impart the lesson that individuals can make a difference in the midst of darkness.  Read the article online now >

March 21, 2009 >

North Shore Magazine features Museum's work to celebrate the memories of victims and educate future generations

April 2009 Cover Story: "Out of the Darkness" by Lisa Skolnik  Read the article online now > 

January 2, 2009 >

Chicago Tribune Winter Architecture Preview Cites IHMEC

A winter architecture preview in the Chicago Tribune lists the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center, designed by Stanley Tigerman, as one of its top 10 new sites to watch.   Read the winter preview online now >

December 18, 2008 >

Generation to Generation Hannukah Party Featured in the Deerfield Review

Holocaust survivors and members of HRC continue to preserve Holocaust memory, build lasting relationships, and celebrate traditions.   Read the article online now >

December 14, 2008 >

Chicago Tribune Features the "Skokie That Was"

Writer Howard Reich, a child of Holocaust survivors, highlights the efforts of Survivors to rebuild their lives in Skokie, the home of the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center
Read the article online now >

November 11, 2009 >

Museum announces April 19, 2009 Opening

JUF Blog: A first-look at the Illinois Holocaust Museum
Chicago Tribune: Holocaust Museum Plans Historic Opening
Chicago Sun Times: Illinois Holocaust Museum to Open April 2009
Daily Herald: New Holocaust Museum Aims to Remember the Past, Transform the Future
Pioneer Press: Holocaust Museum in Skokie set for opening April 19
Naperville Sun: Illinois Holocaust Museum work nears completion
WBBM 780: Illinois' New Holocaust Museum in Skokie (with audio)


Older News >
Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center Remember Kristallnacht
IHMEC co-sponsors Holocaust scholar Debórah Dwork at community-wide program honoring the 70th anniversary of Kristallnacht, The Night of the Broken Glass

New York Times Features Extraordinary Collection Donated to Museum
A stamp collection accumulated by Ken Lawrence is donated to the museum by the Spungen Family Foundation in Illinois.

Preserving death camp helps many to understand the horrors of genocide
Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center responds to the Chicago Tribune article about financial concerns at Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp memorial sites.

 

Associate Director of Education, Kelley Szany, Honored by the Jewish Federation of Greater Chicago. 
Szany received the Federation’s 2008 Samuel A. Goldsmith Award honoring outstanding “next generation” professionals at Jewish communal organizations.  View the acceptance speech online >


Ex-refugees' Shanghai stories: 2 women relive years in Jewish ghetto after families fled Holocaust
Andrew L. Wang of the Chicago Tribune details the stories of two Chicago-area women who fled the Holocaust and found refuge in Shanghai.  The womens' stories will now be preserved in the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center.


HRC Launches Generation to Generation Program
The program pairs a young person who is a member of the Holocaust Remembrance Committee with a Holocaust survivor, with the end goal of the young leader learning the story of survival of their pair.

IHMEC Mourns Passing of Rescuer Irena Sendler

The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center mourns the passing of Irena Sendler, a courageous and unsung hero who risked her life to save approximately 2,500 children during the Holocaust through her work with Zegota, a unit of the Polish underground established specifically to help Jews in hiding.

IHMEC is Highlighted in The Builder
Building construction is tauted in a construction trade magazine.

 

The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center Receives Conservation Bookshelf 
IHMEC is among the first to receive an essential set of resources from the IMLS Connecting to Collections Bookshelf.

IHMEC Mourns Representative Tom Lantos
The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center mourns the passing of Representative Tom Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor to serve in Congress.

Living History, Past Pain
Article highlighting the Holocaust Remembrance Board in the Daily Herald, July 04, 2007

Holocaust Survivors Gather to Leave Their Mark on the New Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center
Watch video coverage at CBS 2 News Chicago

State of Illinois Grants Additional $1 million to New Museum
To help ensure that Illinoisans for generations to come remain aware of the lessons of the Holocaust, Governor Rod R. Blagojevich today announced a $1 million grant to support construction of the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Skokie. 

Groundbreaking, June 22, 2006, 10:30 a.m.
The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center broke ground on the new 65,000-square-foot museum. Joined by Governor Rod Blagojevich, Israeli Consul General Barukh Binah, Attorney General Lisa Madigan, Skokie Mayor George Van Dusen and Lt. Governor Pat Quinn, local survivors and project leaders marked the day with solemn remembrance and hopeful celebration. 

 
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