The Center provides multiple, community-based opportunities, programs and resources for those interested in learning about the Holocaust in an historical and individual context.
- Digital Exhibits:
- For more stories and information on the Holocaust, bullying, and living with disability, please explore:
- Additional Resources:
- North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching: Holocaust Education
- North Carolina Council on the Holocaust
- SHOAH: Survivors and Witnesses in Western North Carolina
- Three local survivors are available to speak in area classrooms. To reach Lotte Meyerson, Eric Wellisch, or Rubin Feldstein email [email protected] for their contact information.
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Hilde Cohen Hoffman moved with her husband Fred to Asheville in 1947 following WWII. Her story is recorded and viewable here.In the 1990’s she recorded this 13 minute interview with Jon Pearlman which is an excellent resource for instigating class discussion.
Lending Library:
Alex Grobman, Those Who Dared: Rescuers and Rescued
Gordan A Craig, The Germans
Gutman, Encyclopedia of the Holocaust (complete set)
Jill Dubin, Little Hebrew Alpabet Coloring Book
Joel Lurie Grishaver, Building Jewish Life: Shabbat
Linda Jacobs Altman, Genocide; The Systematic Killing of a People
Marga Silbermann Randall, How Beautiful We Once Were
Susan D. Bachrach, Tell Them We Remember
The Washington Post, Holocaust: The Obligation To Remember
Verlag Willmuth Arenhovel, Topography of Terror
Jane Yolan, The Devil’s Arithmetic
Art Spiegelman, Maus I: My Father Bleeds History, Maus II: And Here My Trouble Began
Rena Kornreich Gelissen with Heather Dune Macadam, Rena’s Promise: A Story of Sisters in Auschwitz
Eva Schloss, Eva’s Story