Group and School Visits

For the most enhanced experience we recommend up to 75 students per visit for a combined program of Museum Tour and a workshop.

“…I asked each (student) to share what learning experiences they would take from this course with them for the rest of their lives. So many of them listed the museum trip and encouraged me to continue taking students. I. am grateful they found it so valuable and that it expanded their understanding of the Holocaust and moral courage”
Educator at Washingtonville High School

Museum Group Programming

  • In the midst of the Holocaust, in the worst of times, there were individuals who risked everything to protect others. These individuals are now reverently referred to as “The Righteous Among the Nations.” They sheltered, hid, and saved others from certain death. They did so, at great peril to themselves and their families. This lesson incorporates an audio dramatization (entitled “The Hiding”) along with authentic scenarios, that will explore moral courage, and ask you the question, what would you do?

    60 Minute Workshop/60 Minute Museum Experience

  • This intensive workshop takes a deeper look into morality, and the moral compass of the Righteous Among the Nations and introduces the seeds that produce hate and propaganda. In the midst of the Holocaust, in the worst of times, there were individuals who risked everything to protect others. These individuals are now reverently referred to as “The Righteous Among the Nations.” They sheltered, hid, and saved others from certain death. They did so, at great peril to themselves and their families. This lesson incorporates an audio dramatization (entitled “The Hiding”) along with authentic scenarios, that will explore moral courage, and ask you the question, what would you do?

    75 Minute Workshop/60 Minute Museum Experience including Holocaust Survivor recorded testimony

  • An interactive workshop exploring propaganda, its meaning and methods, as used by the Nazis to spread lies, and stoke an irrational fear of others. Students will view a video about the Holocaust that asks the questions, “Where does such hatred come from? How could this have happened? Why?”

    Working collaboratively, groups will discuss and participate in activities, that address propaganda and the power of lies repeated often enough so that they become believable to many. Students will also discuss critical thinking, and the need to separate truth from fiction in their daily lives, on the internet, and on social media.

    60 Minute Workshop/45 Minute Museum Experience

  • Meet and Greet with a Holocaust survivor or WWII Veteran Liberator. A unique opportunity to hear first-hand testimony from a Survivor or Liberator as they share their experience of unfathomable horrors and their stories of perseverance, courage and resilience. Survivor’s or Liberator’s story will be sent prior to visit.

    60 Minute Meet and Greet with Q and A

  • Embracing our neighbors, Embracing our differences. Presents seven powerful skills to combat antisemitism and hate in our daily lives.

    60 Minute Workshop

  • Use the seeds of kindness to promote acceptance and embrace diversity in your home. school/workplace, and community. This workshop is recommended for grades 4-6.

    60 Minute Workshop

  • Our Professional Development workshops are designed to help address hate and intolerance in classrooms, as well as in our communities. They are designed to foster moral courage, perseverance, resilience using the lessons of the Holocaust. This experiential learning workshop, models strategies and methodology that can be utilized in the classroom.

    Two hour minimum

  • Developed by our in house Holocaust education specialists, this workshop is modeled after our educator professional development programs. It is designed to give student leaders an understanding of the concept of moral courage as learned through the lessons of the Holocaust, and how those lessons can be applied to their own lives. Additionally, it will provide an opportunity for students to achieve the New York State Seal of Civic Readiness.

    Two hour minimum

  • Resilience – Highlighting the actions of children, families and communities during theHolocaust, this exhibit asks us to examine WHAT IS RESILIENCE? Examining the Holocaust through this lens changes the way we think about history and connects with our lives today.

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