Bryan Hall clock tower sunset.

Meyerhoff Annual Lecture Series & Events

Upcoming Events

Check back regularly for updates regarding future USHMM events and opportunities.

Past Events

2022 Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Annual Lecture

“The ‘Citizen Other’: Citizenship Stripping in Nazi Germany and the United States.” | March 31st, 2022 4PM PT

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s virtual 2022 Meyerhoff Annual Lecture will focus on the “Citizen Other”: Citizenship Stripping in Nazi Germany and the United States. This virtual discussion is free and open to the public. Registration is required. www.ushmm.org/Meyerhoff2022

The Holocaust, Neo-Nazism, and White Supremacy

October 7 | 4:15 p.m. – 5:45 p.m. | Zoom

The panelists will explore the development of national and international white supremacist organizations during the twentieth century, their relationship to each other and to Nazi movements. In addition, the panelists will consider the points of intersection between these organizations and the ways their ideology has evolved. Hosted by WSU Tri-Cities College of Arts & Sciences in collaboration with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and WSU David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities.

Speakers:
Dr. Robert Bauman, Washington State University Tri-Cities
Dr. Rebecca Erbelding, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Dr. Kristine F. Hoover, Gonzaga University
Dr. Richard King, Columbia College Chicago

To Register for the event, please visit: https://wsu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_KiGF4KPySa6XL7XPFxWjFQ

 

Battles for Belonging: Race, Citizenship, and Exclusion in the Pacific Northwest and Nazi Germany

November 18 | 6:00 p.m. PT | Zoom

By looking at four distinct histories of exclusion, citizenship denial, and the stripping of the rights guaranteed to citizens in the Pacific Northwest from the middle third of the 19th c. through the 1920s-1940s, and in Germany during the Nazi period and the Holocaust, our panel will analyze how racially and religiously motivated persecution and exclusion affected minorities in Europe and the Pacific Northwest. It will explore the similarities, differences, and intersections between these histories to facilitate larger conversations about persecution and racism.

Registration Available: https://beav.es/UPW

The Holocaust, Neo-Nazism, and White Supremacy Event Poster
Battles for Belonging Event Poster