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Holocaust Memorial Day 2025
Posted on behalf of: AVÊÓƵ
Last updated: Wednesday, 29 January 2025
Monday 27 January is (HMD), an annual remembrance of the six million Jews murdered during the Holocaust, alongside the millions of other victims of Nazi persecution and subsequent genocides. This year marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau.
The University has a long-standing interest in Holocaust education and research. In autumn 2024 the Landecker Digital Memory Lab, a new research centre to sustain digital Holocaust memory, was launched in the Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities. The Lab acts as a central hub for interdisciplinary knowledge exchange and research on digital Holocaust memory, while helping to combat the growing challenge to expert knowledge on the subject in online spaces.
Professor Victoria Grace Richardson-Walden, Director at the Lab, was featured in two interviews recently. She discussed preserving cultural and collective memory on the University website, and explored the implications of using of AI in Holocaust memory on .
Events at Sussex
A series of events is available to support learning around Holocaust Memorial Day:
- – 5 February, 2pm-5.15pm
This year’s annual Holocaust Memorial Day event, hosted by The Sussex Weidenfeld Institute of Jewish Studies, features testimony from Holocaust Survivors George Summerfield and Peter Summerfield BEM. It will also include the screening of a short animated film and discussion with the film’s director Tal Kantor. The event is fully booked, but a livestream will be available on the on the day. - – 7 February, 12 noon-3.30pm
Featuring an exhibition and film screening highlighting the experiences of Roma and Sinti communities during the Holocaust, this event will also reflect on contemporary issues of equality, diversity, and inclusion for all people of Gypsy, Roma, and Traveller heritage. - – 10 February, 5.30pm-7.30pm
Professor Younge joins us on campus to discuss ‘What the experiences of Black Germans in Nazi Germany tell us about systems of racial oppression in general and antisemitism in particular’. Themes include memory and justice in the context of historical and contemporary struggles for equality.
Working with local secondary schools to broaden understanding
As part of the University’s recognition of , and in line with our commitment to learners from the Gypsy, Traveller, Roma, Showman, and Boater (GTRSB) community, Sussex shared resources with local secondary school partners who have a higher-than-average intake of Traveller-heritage students. .
For more information on Holocaust Memorial Day, visit the .
This work supports the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal: SDG 10 (reduced inequalities). You can read more about our work on the SDGs.