Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Online project in Britain sets up learning between students and Holocaust survivors

The most recent Facebook live conversation took place with Ruth Barnett, who came to the United Kingdom on the Kindertransport.

A view of an virtual session between genocide survivors and participants with the United Kingdom’s National Holocaust Centre and Museum. Source: United Kingdom’s National Holocaust Centre and Museum via Facebook.
A view of an virtual session between genocide survivors and participants with the United Kingdom’s National Holocaust Centre and Museum. Source: United Kingdom’s National Holocaust Centre and Museum via Facebook.

The United Kingdom’s National Holocaust Centre and Museum has launched an online program that allows schoolchildren at home during the coronavirus pandemic to ask questions to Holocaust survivors.

Connecting the survivors, many of whom are elderly and at home alone during the COVID-19 outbreak, with children was “a mutually kind and enjoyable thing to do,” said organizers of the #MuseumFromHome program, which uses the Facebook Live platform.

“Oddly enough, in view of the subject matter, it is designed to bring some real warmth and light to the coronavirus darkness,” said the museum, as reported by Jewish News.

The most recent Facebook live conversation took place on April 30 with Ruth Barnett, who came to the United Kingdom on the Kindertransport.

The program is one of the museum’s many online learning videos and live events for students.

The museum also said that it has an interactive learning app that is expected to be launched at the end of May, based on its primary school-focused exhibition “The Journey.”

Days earlier, a Jewish security group warned police about a heightened security risk at the Chanukah event.
The prominent Jewish Democrat says she will use her “seniority and clout” in a district that has long elected Black representatives.
The first such legal move on behalf of a Palestinian against the terror group at the International Criminal Court has gone unanswered since December.
A 25-year-old faces hate crime charges after two Jewish men were attacked near a Hendon shul.
“I do think perhaps there is the possibility that in the next few hours the world will get some good news,” Washington’s top diplomat said.
A Shavuot benefit at Jerusalem’s Tower of David raised funds for HaGal Sheli’s surfing-based rehabilitation programs.