I am a survivor of a concentration camp. My eyes saw what no person should witness: gas chambers built by learned engineers. Children poisoned by educated physicians. Infants killed by trained nurses. Women and babies shot by high school and college graduates. So, I am suspicious of education.
My request is:
Help your children become human. Your efforts must never produce learned monsters, skilled psychopaths or educated Eichmanns. Reading, writing, and arithmetic are important only if they serve to make our children more human.

Sincerely,
Dr. Haim Ginott, Holocaust survivor, child psychologist and author

Students

A Time to Remember, A Time to Tell: Mapping Our Tears
The Center for Holocaust and Humanity believes that the privilege and responsibility of the next generations is to accurately re-tell the experiences of the survivors and the victims with passion and reverence.

Through the permanent exhibit, Mapping Our Tears, The Center for Holocaust and Humanity Education is preserving the eyewitness testimonies and artifacts of the Holocaust survivors, WW II Veterans, and local eyewitnesses for the future generations. If you have artifacts or accounts that you would like to donate to the exhibit, please contact us today.

Click here to see Henry Carter's story.

For more information about Survivors, contact The Center at 513.221.1875 ext. 355 or at href="mailto:info@holocaustandhumanity.org">info@holocaustandhumanity.org

Art and Writing Contest How is it possible to find beauty within ugliness, to find courage within despair, to continue living in spite of intolerable pain? In sum, how can the human spirit endure?

2006 Writing Contest Final Results
Click on the winning entrants' names below:

Beth Seeley,
Division I Winner, 6th Grade, Maddux Elementary

Brian Baltis,
Division II Winner, 8th Grade, Hopewell Middle

Rachel Dallman, Division III Winner, 11th Grade, Walnut Hills






Hana’s Suitcase
A Japanese teacher receives a Holocaust artifact from Poland, a child’s suitcase that bore the words: Hana Brady, Born May 16, 1931, Waisenkind (orphan).” In a suspenseful journey, searching for clues across Europe and North America, the teacher and her students are on a quest to find the answer to the question, “Who is Hana Brady?” The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County have over 50 copies of Hana’s Suitcase.
The Local DDC number is 940.5318.092 B812ZL.

Learn more about the Holocaust and local eyewitnesses.









8401 Montgomery Road, Cincinnati, OH 45236      –      Driving Directions      –      info@holocaustandhumanity.org      –      513.487.3055