Home

Exhibition “(No) Children’s Stories”

insidethegatesIn 2021, the project and the interactive exhibition "(No)Children's Stories" return to work with school students. In early November, a series of webinars was held to train guides in one of the schools in Kiev.

Due to quarantine restrictions, the exhibition in Kyiv can not yet be shown in person. However, future guides managed to find excellent solutions for working with the online version of the exhibition in the conditions of distance learning. Over the next week, their classmates and students of the school will be able to attend the exhibition virtually and discuss complex historical and modern topics with their peers. The next step is to bring the project to Kharkiv.

The exhibition "(No)Children's Stories" consists of stories of children and young people from World War II and the Holocaust, as well as modern stories of young people from eight European countries, including Ukraine. Posters created for the exhibition, and short video clips as part of the Anne Frank House project "Stories that Move" tell about different experiences. Visitors will learn how young people at different times tried to counteract injustice towards themselves and others.

Use this link to find further information: https://www.nochildrenstories.com

The exhibition was created by the Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies in cooperation with the transnational project "Learning to Remember" by the Jewish community of Düsseldorf and the  educational platform “Stories that Move” with the support of the German Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Latest News

  • Studying the history of the Holocaust tragedy in the Academy of the State Penitentiary Service: Relevance, Opportunities and Challenges

    On 2 May 2024, the Penitentiary Academy of Ukraine in Chernihiv hosted a roundtable discussion "Studying the History of the Holocaust Tragedy in the Academy: Relevance, Opportunities, and Challenges", which was joined by scholars and students of the Academy, Director of the Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies, PhD Anatolii Podolskyi; Head of the Jewish Community of Chernihiv Oleksandr Chevan; and representative of the Jewish Museum in Krakow Viktoria Mudrytska.

    [More]
  • The Modern Russian-Ukrainian War as a Conflict of Values and Ideologies

    On 2 May 2024, the I.F. Kuras Institute of Political and Ethnic Studies hosted the VI panel discussion "The Modern Russian-Ukrainian War as a Conflict of Values and Ideologies". The event was organised by the I.F. Kuras Institute of Political and Ethnic Studies of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, the National Academy of the Security Service of Ukraine, the Institute of History of Ukraine of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, and the H.S. Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine.

    [More]
  • Rava-Ruska: the Life and Death of the Jewish Community

    Rava-Ruska: the Life and Death of the Jewish Community/ Petro Dolhanov. — Kyiv : Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies, 2023. — 94 p.

    [More]
  • Public lecture at H.S. Skovoroda Kharkiv National Pedagogical University

    On April 25, 2024, Anatolii Podolskyi will give an online public lecture at the Educational and Methodological Centre of the Faculty of History and Law of H.S. Skovoroda Kharkiv National Pedagogical University on the topic "Threats of Totalitarianism Today. Theoretical and methodological aspects" 

    [More]
  • The banality of evil: from Auschwitz to Mariupol

    The YouTube channel "10 Questions to a Historian" featured an interview about the history of the Auschwitz death camp, which has become an undisputed symbol of Nazi crimes in World War II. This is the story of how some people (including educated and seemingly mentally healthy people) killed other people on a scale and systematic basis that had never been seen before. The "banality of evil" was that the virtue of loyalty turned bureaucrats into committed genocide performers.

    [More]
More

Top