The Center for Holocaust Education thrives as a dynamic, interactive and engaging program division within the EVJCC, aiming to continue to teach this generation and future generations the importance of acceptance and peace. 

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Our events encourage collaboration with a greater understanding while honoring and respecting individual histories and traditions.  Programs include presentations, guest speakers, exhibits, a Holocaust education curriculum for schools, an annual Yom Hashoah program and Generations After, a program for children and grandchildren of survivors. 

The Center for Holocaust Education continues to reach people through programs in conjunction with the City of Chandler, Maricopa Community Colleges and the Phoenix Holocaust Association.

Auschwitz Live Virtual Tour

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An Auschwitz Virtual Live Tour transports visitors to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Concentration Camp for a unique learning experience, using historical footage, Holocaust survivor testimonies and modern animation combined with virtual reality tools to teach about the horrors that happened in the world’s most infamous concentration camp. 

The tours are live, led by an expert tour guide who can answer questions and interact with participants. Six Million Voices (also  known as 6 Million Voices) is the EVJCC’s global nonprofit and immersive Holocaust education initiative. 

Group tours and public tours are available. Visit sixmillionvoices.org.

Generations After

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The Center for Holocaust Education is proud to host the East Valley Generations After Descendants Forum for children, grandchildren and descendants of Holocaust survivors, as well as those interested in learning more about the impact of the Holocaust.

Advanced certification in Holocaust education

The Center for Holocaust Education of the East Valley JCC and SIX Million Voices have partnered with The Emil A. and Jenny Fish Center for Holocaust & Genocide Studies at Yeshiva University to offer an advanced certificate in Holocaust education.
Arizona teachers, administrators and librarians who work with students in grades 6-12 are eligible to receive financial assistance from the Center for Holocaust Education of the EVJCC and from 6 Million Voices, in addition to other available sources.

Exhibits

Available Exhibits

  • ‘Hold on to Hope,’ a traveling exhibit inspired by Arizona-based Holocaust survivor Oskar Knoblauch’s memoir, “A Boys Story, A Man’s Memory: Surviving the Holocaust 1933-1945.” The exhibit, in partnership with Scottsdale Arts Learning & Innovation, is available for local schools, libraries and community centers. 
  • ‘In the Eyes of the Soldier – This exhibit tells the story of an American liberator who witnessed the horrors he found at multiple concentration camps in Poland.
  • ‘Das Ghetto and The Final Solution,’ an exhibit by artist Helen Weisman, is a collection of paintings that depict a timeline of Jewish life before, during and after the Holocaust.
  • ‘Then They Came For Us…’: This traveling exhibit  explores the Holocaust, the treatment of black people in Europe and the domestic struggle for civil rights.

For more information, contact Rabbi Michael Beyo.

Holocaust Education Curriculum

The Center for Holocaust Education offers live virtual group tours of the Auschwitz concentration camp for schools and organizations, as well as speakers, exhibits, teacher training and more.

For more information, contact Rabbi Michael Beyo.

Past Exhibits

  • ‘Through the Eyes of Youth: Life and Death in the Bedzin Ghetto,” an exhibit created by the Martin-Springer Institute at Northern Arizona University that tells the story of young people in the Jewish ghetto of Bedzin, Poland, before, during and after the Holocaust.   
  • ‘Documenting History Through Art,’ an exhibit presented by the David Labkovski Project that followed the course of the artist’s life through his artwork, from Vilna to Moscow to Israel. The exhibit included a paint night. lectures, docent-led tours for students and members of the community. 
  • ‘Anne Frank: A History for Today,’ a national exhibit from the New York-based Anne Frank Center USA, was presented in partnership with the Jewish Federation of Greater Phoenix, the City of Chandler, the Chandler Unified School District and the Arizona Region of the Anti-Defamation League. 
  • Macedonian Rail Car: In 2012, the East Valley JCC acquired a railcar from Macedonia, which was occupied by Germany during World War II. This railcar has been certified as “being of the type and era” used to transport Holocaust victims to death camps. The railcar is significant as a symbol of the millions of people whose lives and families were destroyed and subjected to the worse of human nature.

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