The Holocaust Speaker Series, held each Wednesday at 11:00 am, features Holocaust survivors and descendants of survivors sharing stories of life before, during, and after the Holocaust. Join us on Wednesday, December 14th at 11:00 am via Zoom with Rabbi Eric Slaton.

All of Rabbi Slaton’s family lived in Europe when the Nazis came to power, in Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, his parents, and grandparents lived in Vienna.  After the Anschluss on November 11-13, things became very difficult for the Jews of Vienna. His mother’s father committed suicide when he heard the Nazis enter the apartment building. His mother and grandmother were able to travel to London, and his mother was fortunate to be allowed to come to America and live with relatives. She never spoke about her experiences before her early death.

His father was able to get a visa to come to England to study.  Two weeks later, he received a visa to travel to Palestine. His parents chose to send him to England because he could get there sooner. His parents tried to escape over the Italian border but were sent back. Their apartment was near the foreign embassies, so they were not harassed as were Jews in other parts of the city.  Finally, they were ordered to move because an Aryan woman wanted the apartment. They shared a small room with other families.  They were later deported and sent to killing centers.

His father volunteered for the army and was sent to Italy to help with the interrogation of Austrian soldiers who fought for the Nazis. Upon his return, he entered the Northern Illinois of Optometry and was a classmate and friend of Dr. Albert Miller. His parents met in Chicago, married, moved to Minneapolis, and had two children.  Upon his retirement, his father wrote extensively about his experiences. His father died 10 years ago.

REGISTER HERE

Generously sponsored by Margaret and Michael Valentine and presented in partnership with the Harriet and Kenneth Kupferberg Holocaust Center and Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage.

The Holocaust Speaker Series, held each Wednesday at 11:00 am, features Holocaust survivors and descendants of survivors sharing stories of life before, during, and after the Holocaust. Join us on Wednesday, December 14th at 11:00 am via Zoom with Rabbi Eric Slaton.

All of Rabbi Slaton’s family lived in Europe when the Nazis came to power, in Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, his parents, and grandparents lived in Vienna.  After the Anschluss on November 11-13, things became very difficult for the Jews of Vienna. His mother’s father committed suicide when he heard the Nazis enter the apartment building. His mother and grandmother were able to travel to London, and his mother was fortunate to be allowed to come to America and live with relatives. She never spoke about her experiences before her early death.

His father was able to get a visa to come to England to study.  Two weeks later, he received a visa to travel to Palestine. His parents chose to send him to England because he could get there sooner. His parents tried to escape over the Italian border but were sent back. Their apartment was near the foreign embassies, so they were not harassed as were Jews in other parts of the city.  Finally, they were ordered to move because an Aryan woman wanted the apartment. They shared a small room with other families.  They were later deported and sent to killing centers.

His father volunteered for the army and was sent to Italy to help with the interrogation of Austrian soldiers who fought for the Nazis. Upon his return, he entered the Northern Illinois of Optometry and was a classmate and friend of Dr. Albert Miller. His parents met in Chicago, married, moved to Minneapolis, and had two children.  Upon his retirement, his father wrote extensively about his experiences. His father died 10 years ago.

REGISTER HERE

Generously sponsored by Margaret and Michael Valentine and presented in partnership with the Harriet and Kenneth Kupferberg Holocaust Center and Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage.

The Holocaust Speaker Series, held each Wednesday at 11:00 am, features Holocaust survivors and descendants of survivors sharing stories of life before, during, and after the Holocaust. Join us on Wednesday, December 7, at 11:00 am via Zoom with Ruth Barnett.

Ruth tells the moving story of her mother, Irene Levin, who was born Josepha Weil in 1927. Josepha was a child of a large, prosperous, secular family in the Sudetenland, a German corridor of western Czechoslovakia. Josepha was just over eleven years old when her father died, and Hitler walked through the Sudetenland. By December 1941, Josepha, her mother, Irena, and stepfather, Georg, were deported to Terezin, where they spent over two years. Deportation to Auschwitz and slave labor at a sub-camp called Christianstadt followed.

In January 1945, with the Russians advancing, Josepha and her mother were forced on a Death March, which would span 200 miles in ice and snow. Then they were loaded into a cattle car to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where Irena was carried to her death upon arrival. The British liberated Bergen-Belsen in April 1945. After several months of recovery from typhus, Josepha returned to Prague. Only Georg and one cousin returned.

In 1947, Josepha immigrated to America and adopted her mother’s name, Irene. In 1949, Irene met and married her husband, Joe Levin, and raised three children. In 2017, as Ruth just retired from a career as a Quality Assurance professional, her father died. Ruth brought Irene to live in Mason. It was this time with her mother that got Ruth actively involved with her mother’s photos, memoirs, and sharing this important story of survival. It is Ruth’s belief that in this time of Holocaust denial and politicization, it is up to the generation of survivor children to assume the mantle of sharing these firsthand accounts of the realities of hate.

REGISTER HERE

Generously sponsored by Margaret and Michael Valentine and presented in partnership with the Harriet and Kenneth Kupferberg Holocaust Center and Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage.

The Holocaust Speaker Series, held each Wednesday at 11:00 am, features Holocaust survivors and descendants of survivors sharing stories of life before, during, and after the Holocaust. Join us on Wednesday, December 7, at 11:00 am via Zoom with Ruth Barnett.

Ruth tells the moving story of her mother, Irene Levin, who was born Josepha Weil in 1927. Josepha was a child of a large, prosperous, secular family in the Sudetenland, a German corridor of western Czechoslovakia. Josepha was just over eleven years old when her father died, and Hitler walked through the Sudetenland. By December 1941, Josepha, her mother, Irena, and stepfather, Georg, were deported to Terezin, where they spent over two years. Deportation to Auschwitz and slave labor at a sub-camp called Christianstadt followed.

In January 1945, with the Russians advancing, Josepha and her mother were forced on a Death March, which would span 200 miles in ice and snow. Then they were loaded into a cattle car to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where Irena was carried to her death upon arrival. The British liberated Bergen-Belsen in April 1945. After several months of recovery from typhus, Josepha returned to Prague. Only Georg and one cousin returned.

In 1947, Josepha immigrated to America and adopted her mother’s name, Irene. In 1949, Irene met and married her husband, Joe Levin, and raised three children. In 2017, as Ruth just retired from a career as a Quality Assurance professional, her father died. Ruth brought Irene to live in Mason. It was this time with her mother that got Ruth actively involved with her mother’s photos, memoirs, and sharing this important story of survival. It is Ruth’s belief that in this time of Holocaust denial and politicization, it is up to the generation of survivor children to assume the mantle of sharing these firsthand accounts of the realities of hate.

REGISTER HERE

Generously sponsored by Margaret and Michael Valentine and presented in partnership with the Harriet and Kenneth Kupferberg Holocaust Center and Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage.

Join photographer J. Miles Wolf and Skirball Museum director and exhibition curator Abby Schwartz for an informal light lunch and gallery walk and talk of Jewish Cincinnati: A Photographic Record by J. Miles Wolf.

RSVP Required. Click HERE to RSVP.

Join photographer J. Miles Wolf and Skirball Museum director and exhibition curator Abby Schwartz for an informal light lunch and gallery walk and talk of Jewish Cincinnati: A Photographic Record by J. Miles Wolf.

RSVP Required. Click HERE to RSVP.

Faith Communities Go Green’s Education and Lifestyle working group invites you to a webinar on:

Sacred Grounds
Stories and best practices for sustainably stewarding the grounds of faith communities

Presented by: 

Susan Fox is a registered landscape architect and horticulturalist, having worked for 30 years mostly in residential landscape design and construction.  She has a passion for ecology, native plants, and how ordinary people can arrange their environments to be nourishing to both people and the natural world.
Lyric Morris-Latchaw  is a multidisciplinary urban farmer and visual artist whose work focuses on creating meaningful, equitable relationships between neighbors, land, and creatures. She currently tends the Church of the Advent’s Good News Garden, a community pantry garden in Walnut Hills, and grows grows food for a sliding scale payment community-driven CSA (Community Supported Agriculture). She previously farmed for and collectively ran the pay-as-you-can pizza restaurant Moriah Pie; she is co-author of The Moriah Pie Cookbook: Recipes and Stories. She was co-founder of the Hughes McMillan Street Community Garden, and helped establish Wave Pool Gallery’s Community Garden and Grassroom.
The Rev. Canon Jason Oden is the diocesan Canon of Formation for the Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio. He is also the parish pastor for the Church of the Advent in Walnut Hills.

This is a virtual event. Please register to receive the zoom link.

Faith Communities Go Green partners with religious communities to create a more sustainable and equitable future for all by mobilizing their moral voice to reduce the risk of catastrophic climate change.

To learn more and join the team, go to FCGG.org

Faith Communities Go Green’s Education and Lifestyle working group invites you to a webinar on:

Sacred Grounds
Stories and best practices for sustainably stewarding the grounds of faith communities

Presented by: 

Susan Fox is a registered landscape architect and horticulturalist, having worked for 30 years mostly in residential landscape design and construction.  She has a passion for ecology, native plants, and how ordinary people can arrange their environments to be nourishing to both people and the natural world.
Lyric Morris-Latchaw  is a multidisciplinary urban farmer and visual artist whose work focuses on creating meaningful, equitable relationships between neighbors, land, and creatures. She currently tends the Church of the Advent’s Good News Garden, a community pantry garden in Walnut Hills, and grows grows food for a sliding scale payment community-driven CSA (Community Supported Agriculture). She previously farmed for and collectively ran the pay-as-you-can pizza restaurant Moriah Pie; she is co-author of The Moriah Pie Cookbook: Recipes and Stories. She was co-founder of the Hughes McMillan Street Community Garden, and helped establish Wave Pool Gallery’s Community Garden and Grassroom.
The Rev. Canon Jason Oden is the diocesan Canon of Formation for the Episcopal Diocese of Southern Ohio. He is also the parish pastor for the Church of the Advent in Walnut Hills.

This is a virtual event. Please register to receive the zoom link.

Faith Communities Go Green partners with religious communities to create a more sustainable and equitable future for all by mobilizing their moral voice to reduce the risk of catastrophic climate change.

To learn more and join the team, go to FCGG.org

Explore how storytelling through Annie Ruth’s On Her Shoulders art collection connects visual art and writing. Focus on a variety of topics, such as supporting Social Emotional Learning, integrating language arts, history and culture and connecting socially conscious themes to art. Participants will create a theme-based work of art related to the lesson and inspired by Annie Ruth’s art.

Free On Her Shoulders ART Grab bags will be distributed to registered participants and contain supplies needed for the art-making workshop and free gifts. Certificates of participation will be provided documenting two hours of professional development. Teachers of all grade levels and disciplines, homeschool teachers, art education majors and community educators are encouraged to attend.

July 16, 2022

10 a.m. to Noon Educator Workshop

12:30 to 2:30 p.m. Meet & Greet with distribution of free curriculum sets – Open to the Public

Register now by emailing schoolpartnerships@cincymuseum.org.

Explore how storytelling through Annie Ruth’s On Her Shoulders art collection connects visual art and writing. Focus on a variety of topics, such as supporting Social Emotional Learning, integrating language arts, history and culture and connecting socially conscious themes to art. Participants will create a theme-based work of art related to the lesson and inspired by Annie Ruth’s art.

Free On Her Shoulders ART Grab bags will be distributed to registered participants and contain supplies needed for the art-making workshop and free gifts. Certificates of participation will be provided documenting two hours of professional development. Teachers of all grade levels and disciplines, homeschool teachers, art education majors and community educators are encouraged to attend.

July 16, 2022

10 a.m. to Noon Educator Workshop

12:30 to 2:30 p.m. Meet & Greet with distribution of free curriculum sets – Open to the Public

Register now by emailing schoolpartnerships@cincymuseum.org.