Holocaust survivor made MBE says ‘nothing can change’ without psychology
Lydia Tischler was honoured in a ceremony at Windsor Castle on Wednesday. Source link
Lydia Tischler was honoured in a ceremony at Windsor Castle on Wednesday. Source link
The Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum and Memorial announced on Wednesday that, beginning March 1, all tickets must be booked through its online reservation system. Previously, individual visitors could obtain entry cards on site. In a post on the museum’s website, officials said the change was “primarily a response to the unethical practices of certain tour operators.” “They sold museum tours that included transportation from Kraków. At the last minute, customers were informed that, due to alleged booking issues, the departure time was being moved to very early in the morning or even the middle of the night,” said Andrzej Kacorzyk, the museum’s deputy director for visitor services. “Unfortunately, this misleading practice became a business model for some entities. Furthermore, they shifted the blame for the supposed difficulties onto the museum, which was entirely untrue.” Related Articles With nearly 2 million visitors last year, the museum is one of Poland’s most visited sites and offers free admission. In the past, visitors often arrived as early as 3 a.m. to stand in line for entry cards. Tour operators …
(The Conversation) — Joe Engel was and remains an icon in Charleston, South Carolina. Born in Zakroczym, Poland, he survived Auschwitz and several other concentration camps and fought with the resistance before landing on American shores as a refugee in 1949. After retirement from his dry-cleaning business, Engel focused his later years on Holocaust education. As part of these efforts, he took to sitting on downtown park benches wearing a name tag that read “Joe Engel, Holocaust Survivor: Ask me questions” – becoming the city’s first public memorial to the victims of Nazi genocide. Knowing he would not be here to impart his message forever, Engel and his friend and fellow survivor Pincus Kolender led a drive to install the permanent memorial that now stands in Charleston’s Marion Square park. In 2021, I moved to the city to take up my role as a professor and director of Holocaust studies at the College of Charleston. I arrived just in time to meet Engel and to teach many local students who had met him. He died …