Jewish Culture and Society

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Sites and Sounds: Weaving Auditory Components into the Memorialization of the Plazsow WWII Forced Labor/Concentration Camp

Event Type
Conference/Workshop
Sponsor
Program in Jewish Culture & Society | Illini Hillel | Bronfman Center for Jewish Student Life at NYU | Champaign Urbana Jewish Federation | Hillel at Hobart and William Smith Colleges | Hillel at University of Virginia | Hillel Campus Alliance of Michigan | Hillel Poland | Hillel@Home | Holocaust Community Services | Hunter College Hillel | Illini Hillel | Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center | Jewish Federation of the Quad Cities | Jewish Studies | Latin America Hillels | Peoria Holocaust Memorial | Rochester Institute of Technology Hillel | Sinai Temple of Champaign-Urbana | Springfield Jewish Federation | St. Louis Holocaust Museum and Learning Center | Syracuse Hillel | University of Arizona Hillel | Krouse Family Visiting Scholars in Judaism and Western Culture Fund | The Initiative in Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies | Slavic Languages and Literature | Office of the Vice Chancellor for Diversity Equity & Inclusion
Virtual
wifi event
Date
Nov 9, 2020   12:00 pm  
Speaker
Karolina Ozog
Cost
free
Registration
Registration
Contact
Jewish Culture & Society
E-Mail
jewishculture@illinois.edu
Phone
217-333-7978
Views
207

Karolina Ozog works on Jewish historical sites at the Historical Museum of the City of Kraków. Recently, she has been working with her colleagues to memorialize Concentration Camp Plaszow, located in a southern suburb of Kraków on the grounds of two former Jewish cemeteries. Between October 1942 and January 1945, more than 30,k000 people were imprisoned there and approximately 5,000 were murdered.  After World War II, the territory was not commemorated and remained an unfenced, open public space. At the moment, it serves as local park and is taken over by ubiquitous nature and social leisure activities. The Historical Museum of the City of Krakow is currently engaged in a large-scale project to commemorate the entire site while maintaining free entry.  In this presentation, Ms. Ozog will discuss how sound is being utilized in the development of the memorial site. She will explain how and why visitors to Plaszow will be invited to listen to auditory components that include historical music as well as ambient sounds related to the physical attributes of the site.

If you are interested in learning more about the site, the archeological work being done to recover some of the historical artifacts, and the process of developing the memorial site more general terms, you may also want to join us on Tuesday, November 10th at 3PM for a presentation about the Plaszow Camp and the Museum’s project to memorialize it.

Workshop recording can be found here.

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