Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland
The Holocaust in Eastern European Memory and Politics after the Cold War:
The Case of Poland, 1989 -2025
WATCH THIS WEBINAR (ENGLISH) HERE
WATCH THIS WEBINAR (POLISH) HERE
November 9, 2025 / 10AM PST / Noon Chicago / 1PM East Coast / 7PM Poland / 8PM Tel Aviv
WATCH THIS WEBINAR (ENGLISH) HERE
WATCH THIS WEBINAR (POLISH) HERE

Rabbi Haim Beliak
Dr. Joanna Michlic’s in-depth research and analysis informed the work of Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland throughout the seventeen years of my involvement. In 2010, we turned to Dr. Michlic when considering the significance of the history of Polish-Jewish relations, which would shape the pastoral and educational efforts of the emerging Progressive Jewish community. Dr. Michlic’s groundbreaking work, Poland’s Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present (2006), was among the key publications that demanded our attention.
We were very pleased when the Polish version of this book was finally published in 2017. Subsequently, whenever we could break into Dr. Michlic’s busy schedule of teaching and research, we asked travelers and study groups to read her books and hear her lectures. Our last Freighted Legacies webinar, featuring Dr. Michlic, introduced a critical historical anchor. We are privileged that in the forthcoming webinar, we will hear about the latest developments.
In this talk, Dr. Michlic discusses a crucial shift in the process of memorialization of the Holocaust in post-communist Eastern Europe that has occurred around the year of 2010. Despite its limitations, the 1989 – early 2000s liberal phase of memorialization of the Holocaust in postcommunist Europe was conducive to the emergence for the first time of critical history writing about the Holocaust, driven by local Jewish and non-Jewish senior and junior scholars living in their respective homelands or abroad. It also resulted in highly emotionally charged public and historical debates, such as the well-known international Polish debate of 2000 – 2002, about the Jedwabne massacre of 10 July 1941, which aimed at coming to terms with the difficult history of the treatment of the Jewish minority during the Holocaust. However, by the beginning of the second decade of the twenty-first century, troubling undercurrents of the memorialization of the Holocaust, with continuing antisemitic-based prejudices towards Jewish victims and Jewish survivors, have exploded and ascended forcefully. As a result, the memorialization of the Holocaust has been subjected to instrumentalization, abuses, and attacks from a wide range of social, cultural, and political actors as never before. This talk explores the post-2010 shifts in approaches and their cultural significance.
(By Joanna Beata Michlic Stockholm, CBEES/Elanders, January 2021)

Joanna Michlic
Joanna Beata Michlic is a social and cultural historian specializing in the history of the Holocaust and its memorialization, antisemitism and nationalism, and East European Jewish childhood and families in Europe. She is a Senior Honorary Fellow at the UCL Institute of Education, and is one of the three editors-in-chief of Genealogy journal. Between Jan. 2023 and October 2024, she was a Visiting Hedda Andersson Professor of Holocaust and Contemporary History at Lund University, Sweden. Michlic is an author of 8 books, including Poland’s Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present, Bringing the Dark Past to Light: The Representations of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe, and Jewish Family 1939 –Present: History, Representation, and Memory, Brandeis University Press/NEUP, January 2017) that made to the Ethical Inquiry list of the best books published in 2017 at Brandeis University. She is a recipient of numerous prestigious academic awards and fellowships, including the Gerda Henkel Fellowship (2017–2022) and the Yad Vashem Fellowship (Fall 2025). She serves as a member of the Academic Faculty Committee of the Claims Conference Committee. Her forthcoming publications include Through the Eyes of Jewish Child Survivors from Poland: Family, War, Identity and Nationhood: to be published in in 2025 in English by Nebraska University Press and in German by Dietz-Verlagpublisher; and Shattered Liberation: Sexual Violence Against Holocaust Survivors (1943-1946), co-edited with Anna Cichopek-Gajrar and Nina Paulovicova( Purdue Academic Press, Winter, 2025).
Our 2021 Freighted Legacies Webinar Featuring Joanna Michlic:
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