Join us on a walking tour of the Dachau Concentration Camp Memorial Site. This auditory experience captures the sound of the present-day landscape with its birdsong and tourist chatter and is layered with historical context and references.
https://t.co/WSyBy1yRj5
If you haven't seen it yet, The Ackerman Center hosts a podcast that provides a space to engage in a thoughtful and in-depth conversation about the Holocaust, genocide, and human rights studies. It is available wherever you find your podcasts.
https://t.co/NPkAyRG3uj
This is glorious. Celebrate Ozsváth & Turner’s lyrical new translations of Goethe’s timeless poetry tonight with us at @UTDallasArts’s SP/N Gallery!
.@AckermanUTD held a special concert and poetry reading today to commemorate #HolocaustRemembranceDay. The event featured the UT Dallas Choir performing excerpts from “Holocaust Cantata,” readings by faculty & poems read in multiple languages by members of the campus community.
In commemoration of #HolocaustRemembranceDay, students, faculty, staff and community members will recite Holocaust poems in multiple languages. Excerpts from “Holocaust Cantata,” will also be performed by the UT Dallas Choir.
Tomorrow | 11:30am | @atec_utdallas building
UTD Giving Day is going strong! Please consider making a gift to the Ackerman Center if you have not already done so. Your support is greatly appreciated!
https://t.co/udVezKiRJx
It's UT Dallas Giving Day! Terry and Bert Romberg will match every dollar in donation to our center. Will you answer the call? https://t.co/amu6J9WUWI #COMETogetherUTD
The Holocaust Cantata performed Friday by the combined choirs of the UT Dallas Chamber Singers, University Choir, Garland High School A Cappella Choir and the Arapaho United Methodist Church Chancel Choir was moving and beautiful.
Dr. Ozsváth, The Leah and Paul Lewis Chair in Holocaust Studies and founder of the Holocaust Studies Program at The University of Texas at Dallas, in recognition of her lifetime of dedication fulfilling the mission of the Ackerman Center: “Teaching the Past, Changing the Future.”
Tomorrow marks 103 years since the Armenian Genocide began. Explore survivor and eyewitness testimony from this history in our Archive at https://t.co/f7n0PqwKfg