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Texas Holocaust and Genocide Commission

Events

History Highlights: The Holocaust in Hungary

Event details
Calendar   Workshops
Location Zoom
Date Thu, Sep 7, 7:00pm - 8:30pm
Duration   1h 30m
Details

For much of the Holocaust, Hungarian Jews lived in relative safety thanks to their country's alliance with Germany. They were targets of anti-Jewish laws limiting their participation in the economy and subjecting Jewish men to a labor service draft, but were largely spared mass violence until the German invasion of March 1944. In the Holocaust's most rapid deportation, over 400,000 Hungarian Jews were transported from the countryside primarily to Auschwitz, where most were gassed upon arrival. Jews in Budapest, Hungary’s capital, were spared deportation – but not mass violence. Highlighting survivor testimonies from the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum’s oral history collection, Dr. Sara Abosch-Jacobson, the Barbara Rabin chief education officer, and Felicia Williamson, director of library and archives, discuss the experiences of Budapest’s Jews during the Holocaust.

This program is part of the museum's History Highlights series.

There is no cost to attend this event, but registration is required.

Register here. Please register for one ticket per device used.
This virtual event will take place on the online platform Zoom. A link to join will be sent to registered guests via email one hour before the start of the program.

Repeats? No
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