Birmingham Holocaust Education Center: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Birmingham Holocaust Education Center logo.png|right|200px]]
[[File:Birmingham Holocaust Education Center logo.png|right|200px]]
The '''Birmingham Holocaust Education Center''' is a nonprofit organization founded in [[2002]] to educate the public about the state-sponsored genocide carried out by Germany's Nazi government in the 1930s and 1940s. The group aims to apply the lessons of that history toward the establishment of a more just, humane and tolerant society. The executive director is [[Joyce Spielberger]], who succeeded [[Rebecca Dobrinski]] in late [[2017]].
The '''Birmingham Holocaust Education Center''' is a nonprofit organization founded in [[2002]] to educate the public about the state-sponsored genocide carried out by Germany's Nazi government in the 1930s and 1940s. The group aims to apply the lessons of that history toward the establishment of a more just, humane and tolerant society. The executive director is [[Melissa Self Patrick]].


The center's offices are located in the [[Bayer Properties Building]] at 2222 [[Arlington Avenue]]. The Education Center maintains a multimedia library of educational materials and offers teacher workshops, programs, visual exhibits and a speakers' bureau which includes holocaust survivors and their children, available to schools and community groups.
The center's offices are located in the [[Bayer Properties Building]] at 2222 [[Arlington Avenue]]. The Education Center maintains a multimedia library of educational materials and offers teacher workshops, programs, visual exhibits and a speakers' bureau which includes holocaust survivors and their children, available to schools and community groups.
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In [[2013]] the center began planning and raising funds for a [[Birmingham Holocaust Memorial Garden]] to be constructed near the [[9-11 Memorial]] on [[19th Street North]]. When the Center approached the [[Birmingham City Council]] in June [[2016]] to request that the city remove some landscaping to prepare the site, councilor [[Sheila Tyson]] argued against it, contrasting it with her attempts to win public funds to improve the privately-owned [[Shadow Lawn Cemetery]].
In [[2013]] the center began planning and raising funds for a [[Birmingham Holocaust Memorial Garden]] to be constructed near the [[9-11 Memorial]] on [[19th Street North]]. When the Center approached the [[Birmingham City Council]] in June [[2016]] to request that the city remove some landscaping to prepare the site, councilor [[Sheila Tyson]] argued against it, contrasting it with her attempts to win public funds to improve the privately-owned [[Shadow Lawn Cemetery]].
==Executive directors==
* [[Rebecca Dobrinski]], 2015-2017
* [[Joyce Spielberger]], 2017-2019
* [[Melissa Self Patrick]], 2019-


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 17:31, 6 November 2019

Birmingham Holocaust Education Center logo.png

The Birmingham Holocaust Education Center is a nonprofit organization founded in 2002 to educate the public about the state-sponsored genocide carried out by Germany's Nazi government in the 1930s and 1940s. The group aims to apply the lessons of that history toward the establishment of a more just, humane and tolerant society. The executive director is Melissa Self Patrick.

The center's offices are located in the Bayer Properties Building at 2222 Arlington Avenue. The Education Center maintains a multimedia library of educational materials and offers teacher workshops, programs, visual exhibits and a speakers' bureau which includes holocaust survivors and their children, available to schools and community groups.

The Birmingham Holocaust Education Center participated in the planting of an Anne Frank tree at Kelly Ingram Park in 2010 as a memorial to all who have suffered or died as a result of hatred and discrimination.

In 2013 the center began planning and raising funds for a Birmingham Holocaust Memorial Garden to be constructed near the 9-11 Memorial on 19th Street North. When the Center approached the Birmingham City Council in June 2016 to request that the city remove some landscaping to prepare the site, councilor Sheila Tyson argued against it, contrasting it with her attempts to win public funds to improve the privately-owned Shadow Lawn Cemetery.

Executive directors

References

  • Tomberlin, Michael (January 29, 2014) "Birmingham Holocaust Memorial Garden planned for downtown." The Birmingham News
  • Archibald, John (June 22, 2016) "Alabama city councilwoman on Holocaust: "Dead is dead"." The Birmingham News

External links