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Calendar

Events in February–April 2023

  • - Film Screening - Stabbed in the Back
    Film Screening - Stabbed in the Back

    Category: General Film Screening - Stabbed in the Back


    March 23, 2023

    Jewish soldiers patriotically served in Austro-Hungarian and German armies during WWI only to become scapegoated victims in the Holocaust.

    This colorized documentary film presents for the first time on screen the story of hundreds of thousands of Jewish soldiers who served in the Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary) armies during The Great War between 1914-1918, only to be persecuted a mere two decades later during the Holocaust. Otto Frank (father of Anne) was one of the most well-known Jewish WWI veterans in Germany. After loyally serving his country, he was forced into hiding. In return for his sacrifice, his country ended up murdering his wife and children. The fate of the veterans and their ultimate betrayal is illustrated in this groundbreaking film.

    Filmmaker Peter Rosenbluth will be in attendance and participate in a Q&A. Film is 42 minutes long. Q&A and reception to follow.

    Film presented in partnership with the German Embassy in the United States.

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  • - Webinar - The Immortals: The Four Chaplains and Charles Walter David, Jr.
    Webinar - The Immortals: The Four Chaplains and Charles Walter David, Jr.

    Category: General Webinar - The Immortals: The Four Chaplains and Charles Walter David, Jr.


    April 27, 2023

    Steven Collis discusses his book The Immortals: The World War II Story of Five Fearless Heroes, the Sinking of the Dorchester, and an Awe-inspiring Rescue. During World War II, on January 29, 1943, the SS Dorchester and a small convoy sailed the perilous route from Newfoundland to the Army Command Base in Greenland. Four chaplains were assigned to the Dorchester with more than 900 men on board. Alexander Goode, a Jewish rabbi; John Washington, a Catholic priest; George Fox, a Methodist minister; and Clark Poling, a Baptist minister, all offered comfort, reassurances, and prayers with a warning from the captain that a German submarine was hunting their convoy. The Nazi U-boat captain, Karl-Jurg Wachter, had been stalking the Americans for days. When the weather finally gave him an opening, Wachter was in a position to strike. Just past midnight, on February 3, just hours from their destination, the Dorchester was torpedoed and sank, throwing its passengers into the frigid waters and creating the worst single loss of an American personnel convoy during WWII. Many of the survivors credit the four chaplains with saving their lives. Those chaplains would become known as "The Immortal Chaplains" for their heroism in making the ultimate sacrifice. With no thought of themselves, they calmly helped men to safety through the chaos of their badly damaged ship, searched for spare life jackets for those without--eventually giving away their own life jackets and encouraging men in the freezing waters. The celebrated story of the Immortal Chaplains is now joined for the first time in print by the largely untold story of another hero of the sinking of the Dorchester: Charles Walter David, Jr. was a young Black petty officer aboard a Coast Guard cutter traveling with the convoy who bravely dived into the glacial water over and over again, even with hypothermia setting in, to try to rescue the men the chaplains had first helped and inspired to never give up.

    Register at https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_bH4FcKXRR7u2hmEdLtxILw#/registration.

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Open Monday - Friday 9 - 5. Dupont-Kalorama Museum Walk Weekend May 18th and 19th!

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