School of Dialogue Achievements 2013-2014
Transcription
School of Dialogue Achievements 2013-2014
FORUM FOR DIALOGUE FO RUM FO R D I A LO GU E Forum for Dialogue is the largest and oldest Polish non-governmental organization engaging in Polish-Jewish dialogue. Through education, study tours and working with Polish and Jewish opinion leaders, we create an opportunity for non-Jewish Polish citizens and Jews to get to know each other and, together, explore both our histories and our futures. www.dialog.org.pl School of Dialogue You can join us in building bridges of understanding and mutual respect by donating to: Friends of the Forum 501 N. Clinton, Suite 903 Chicago, IL 60654 [email protected] THANK YOU! and stature as a model for tolerance connections. Forum for Dialogue established Achievements 2013–2014 Embracing history, building the future this innovative outreach in 2008 with a goal of helping middle school and high school students all over Poland to appreciate and embrace the Jewish history of their towns. School of Dialogue is an adventure that allows students, led by Forum for Dialogue educators, to uncover the forgotten history of their towns. Students share their newly gained knowledge with other residents of Forum for Dialogue is grateful for the consistent and generous support of the following individuals, whose commitment has made the School of Dialogue both possible and sustainable: Martin and Mickey Baumrind, Alyse Mason Brill and Nathan Brill, Harvey Krueger, Irene Pletka, Sigmund Rolat, Jill and Michael Rosenbaum, Edith and Martin Stein. We wish to thank the following people and companies whose support has been of special value in the expansion of our School of Dialogue program in 2013: Amtra Ltd., Robyn Dryen , Sheila and David Fuente, Paulina and Łukasz Gasińscy, Grant Gochin, Miriam Greenbaum, Shirley and Henry Hackel, Tomasz Kapliński, Paulina Kieszkowska-Knapik and Maciej Knapik, Piotr Lewicki, Sławomir Łopalewski, Harvey Krueger, Trisha and Fred Margulies, Lynne and Allan Reich, Carol Saivetz, Eva and Robert Wisnik. We are grateful to the institutional donors who supported School of Dialogue in 2013/2014 school year: Claims Conference City of Warsaw is growing in size education, bridge-building and intergroup FRIENDS OF THE FORUM Friends of the Forum is a U.S.-based 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that promotes Polish-Jewish dialogue. In concert with the Forum for Dialogue and other NGOs, it focuses on reconciling 800 years of Jewish history in Poland with presentday Jews and Poles, building bridges of memory over the gulf of prejudice. www.friendsoftheforum.org SCHOOL OF DIALOGUE The Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany www.claimscon.org their towns. So far, the School of Dialogue program has reached more than 200 middle schools and high schools in more than 130 different locations throughout Poland. As a result of Forum for Dialogue’s initiative, students who participate in School of Dialogue become more open-minded and aware citizens of both Poland and the world, attuned to the complexities of history and the dangers of anti-Semitic stereotypes. 1200 students a year! At the conclusion of SCHOOL OF DIALOGUE’S fifth year, 1,200 students gathered for our annual gala in January 2014 at Poland’s National Opera & Theater in Warsaw, the most splendid hall in the capital. In recognition of the program and the achievements of the students, this year’s gala will take place under the honorary patronage of the President of Poland, Bronisław Komorowski. If you’re in Warsaw on January 9th 2015, please join us. ”Our group had an idea to clean up the Jewish cemetery. We did not do it for compliments, but to pay respect to the Jews.” – student in Frysztak Travel to places connected with our ancestors can stir a whole spectrum of emotions. The journey is always sentimental, but finding connections to family in a foreign land is not easy. What did this place mean to them? What does it mean to me? Visitors ask these questions, but find no easy answers awaiting them. Through the SCHOOL OF DIALOGUE , however, Diaspora and Israeli Jews are finding a way to achieve meaningful relationships with their hometowns and with the students who show them the way. It is a powerful experience to visit the town of your ancestors and be greeted by Polish students who offer to serve as guides. Even those with no roots in a specific town are moved by the connections provided by these students. An encounter with School of Dialogue youth is a chance to engage in spontaneous conversations about the reality of modern Poland. Truly, School of Dialogue fulfills the mission embodied by its name. – Patrycja, student in Białystok. Keep Trying High school students in Dębica created a brochure about Jewish history of their town, and published it with the support of town authorities. It is now available in Dębica’s public venues. Students from Ruda Śląska convinced the mayor of their town to commemorate the Wirk synagogue. First, the town added information to a historical plaque near the synagogue’s site, but the students have now been promised a commemorative marker for the synagogue itself. “During the four-day program about Jewish culture, I have learned more than in all 14 years of my life. I had no idea that the town I live in was inhabited by so many Jews.” – a student from Błonie summarized her experience. Throughout the workshops, middle school students from Błonie retraced the lot of Chaja-Łaja Szpajsendler and her family, Chaja being a childhood friend of one of the town’s senior citizens. The result was a narrated tour of Jewish Błonie, based on the fate, experience and locations connected to the Szpajsendler family. Commemoration is our Task “I now understand how important it is to actively commemorate Jews from Bircza. If our generation is not going to do it, the next one will know even less” – said Przemysław from Bircza. A few months later, by their own initiative, students built and unveiled a simple wooden monument marking the mass execution site in their village. ”The Jews had contributed to the development of the town we live in. Most people in Limanowa have no clue about it. The goal of this project is to make them aware of it.” – student in Limanowa Having an Impact Discovering a story of Chaja-Łaja School Leads to Real Dialogue ”Forum for Dialogue has opened my eyes, completed my knowledge. I can clearly say that they changed my attitude towards Jews.” Sing to Remember Students from Milewicz High School in Warsaw, a vocational school in Włocławek and Wiktor, a student in Błonie wrote hip hop songs about their experience in the School of Dialogue. Two of those songs were the highlights of last year’s gala, and students from W łocławek will perform their songs on the stage of National Opera & Theater at next year’s gala in January 2015. Becoming Local Guides Student from Sosnowiec, with the help of their city hall, published a guidebook of places related to Jews in their town. An audio-guide prepared by students from Wąchock was posted on the town’s website, where it can be downloaded. In Frysztak and Jasło, participants in the School of Dialogue also wrote guides to attract others to follow their trail of places related to Jewish history. ”I’m surprised by the knowledge I have acquired here. Until now, I didn’t know about any of these places—about the synagogue that was on the Piłsudski street or the cemetery near the Śrem’s exit road. Getting to know their history is also very interesting. Who were they? What did they do?” – Ania, student in Śrem Real Commitment A group of students from Zbąszyń and their charismatic teacher are a great example of School of Dialogue being a kick-start for further initiatives. After completing the program, not only did they organize a bike trip around the town, but also convinced the mayor to sponsor posters placed on the main street, pin-backed buttons and stickers – all of them promoting dialogue. Białystok Bircza Błonie Bytom Chrzanów Ciechanów Dąbrowa Tarnowska Frysztak Góra Grójec Hrubieszów Jasło Konstancin Jeziorna Krasnosielc Krzepice Limanowa Lubasz Łask Mszczonów Nasielsk Nowy Targ Oborniki Olkusz Pruszków Radzymin Ruda Śląska Sosnowiec Śrem Warszawa Wąchock Wieruszów Wiskitki Wiżajny Włocławek Zagórów Zamość Zbąszyń