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Bevis Marks: Britain’s Most Significant Synagogue

Virtually explore four galleries dedicated to the UK’s oldest synagogue that’s still active. Bevis Marks was erected in 1701 following the resettlement of Jews in the UK in 1656. Its Wren-style interior remains unchanged, reflecting the influence of the great Portuguese synagogue in Amsterdam of 1675. The synagogue embraced a new Sephardi community, led by Rabbi Menasseh Ben Israel of Amsterdam, who acted as a Jewish ambassador to Oliver Cromwell. The services at Bevis Marks are today made up of Jews with Sephardi, Ashkenazi and Mizrahi backgrounds.

ONLINE. www.jewishmuseum.org.uk 

 

David Breuer-Weil: Golden Drawings

A virtual exhibition of illuminated drawings made in isolation by London artist David Breuer-Weil, who’s well known for his huge bronze sculptures. He started the series on day one of lockdown as a form of meditation. Executed in pencil on paper with gold leaf, the pieces reflect different aspects of the current pandemic and the human condition. The series is partly inspired by medieval apocalyptic manuscripts that were often illuminated with gold leaf to give an otherworldly sense of reality, and were often produced in periods of great upheaval. Read more about this project in the Jan 2021 issue of JR.

ONLINE. www.davidbreuerweil.com

Ben Uri

No Set Rules

An exhibition and publication that explores the limitless possibilities of working on paper by bringing together selected drawings, prints and paintings from the Philip Schlee collection by artists working in Britain between 1920 and 2004. Presenting 51 works by 37 artists, No Set Rules covers a wide range of subject matter, techniques and practice, from figuration to abstraction, exploring 100 years of expression on paper and proving, as David Hockney once observed, that “there are no set rules in drawing”.

No end date specified

Cartoons and Caricatures, 1950

This archive exhibition shows contributions from leading cartoonists and caricaturists presenting their renditions of celebrities, from Churchill to Stalin, harmonica player Larry Adler to conductor Sir Thomas Beecham.

No end date specified

Yalta 1945: Komar and Melamid

Launching the world tour of this seminal installation of Yalta 1945, Ben Uri presents the works of Vitaly Komar and Alexander Melamid, graduates of the Stroganov Institute of Arts and Design. Founders of Sots Art, merging socialist realism, politicising pop, and conceptual art, the two are amongst the Soviet Union’s most important non-conformist artists. Their rich career together until 2003, and individually since, is both a challenge to the establishment and traditional in its concepts, with cutting wit and piercing satire, in a post-Soviet and -perestroika world.

No end date specified

Internment: In Memory of Eva Aldbrook – 1925-2020

On the 80th anniversary of internment in Britain, Ben Uri celebrates the many artists who were imprisoned in the UK. The sudden and dramatic implementation of the government’s mass internment policy was a result of the ‘enemy aliens’ register, listing many of those seeking refuge in Britain from Nazi persecution. In this case, internment art was born, which saw the artists use improvised materials in their work, ranging from toothpaste, vegetable dyes and brick dust mixed with oil from sardine cans, and for pigments, twigs burnt to make charcoal sticks; wiry beard hair for brushes; and newspaper to paint and draw on. This exhibition presents 16 artists who were either interned themselves or depicted former internees.

No end date specified

Painting with an Accent: German Jewish Émigré Stories

The Ben Uri Gallery and the German Embassy have come together to mark 85 years of the November pogroms and the Kindertransport with this exhibition, capturing the events that unfolded in 1938 through moving and thought-provoking works of art. During the November pogroms, Germany’s Nazi regime unleashed on Jewish citizens the terrors that would lead to the abyss of the Holocaust and to countless emigration efforts to escape the atrocities. The Kindertransport represented a beacon of humanity in inhuman times. The legacy of the various journeys by the artists featured in this exhibition, and the future of remembrance for the next generation’s interpretation of the events, is captured to remind the audience of the importance of upholding the values of democracy, respect for human rights, and fundamental freedoms that remain at the core of Germany’s key responsibilities.

No end date specified

Motherlands – Angels – Country – Bengal: Paintings, Sculptures and Drawings by Gerry Judah

Gerry Judah’s upbringing in India, surrounded by the fantastic architecture of temples, mosques and synagogues, along with the theatrical rituals of the festivals and cultural celebrations, triggered his highly creative imagination and set the tone for his artistic career. Having worked on high-profile commissions for museums and institutions, this exhibition encompasses a number of different aspects of Judah’s career.

No end date specified

Edith Birkin: The Final Journey

At the age of 14, Edith Birkin entered Poland’s Łódź Ghetto. Three years later, she was sent to Auschwitz and survived a death march to Flossenbürg camp, before being liberated from Bergen-Belsen in 1945. Upon discovering that none of her family had survived the Holocaust, Birkin recorded her experiences in the forms of literature (Unshed Tears) and art. This exhibition showcases the latter, with pieces including Entry into the Ghetto, Why, and Liberation Day.

No end date specified

Rothenstein’s Relevance

Sir Willian Rothenstein – artist, writer, teacher and consummate networker – was also a leading British artist in the years before World War I. The themes showcased in this exhibition include Jewish subjects, portraiture and figure studies, plus work from both world wars.

No end date specified

Liberators

Twelve extraordinary female artists from the Ben Uri collection are celebrated in this exhibition, with a focus on their lives, courage and strength of character across countless endeavours undertaken during the first half of the 20th century.

No end date specified

Yiddish: The Language, People and Heritage

This online exhibition explores the Ben Uri archives, with unique pieces reflecting the prevailing cultural heritage of its founders: émigré Lazar Berson and his Yiddish speaking co-religionists; Eastern-European artisans; and businessmen fleeing pogroms in the Russian Pale of Settlement.

No end date specified

Jankel Adler: A 'Degenerate' Artist in Britain, 1940-49

This is the first museum exhibition (now available virtually) of Adler’s works in Britain since 1951. The Polish painter introduced innovative styles and techniques, particularly in printmaking. He is now considered one of the most important European modernists working in mid-century Britain. Works featured include Mother and Child, Beginning of the Revolt, and Bird and Cage.

No end date specified

Becoming Gustav Metzger: Uncovering the Early Years, 1945-1959

In 2021, the Ben Uri Research Unit in partnership with The Gustav Metzger Foundation, presented the first museum exhibition exclusively examining the formative years of refugee artist, activist and environmentalist Gustav Metzger. Now you can view this display online. Showcasing 40 drawings and paintings, the majority never previously exhibited, as well as related archival material, Metzger’s artistic journey is charted while simultaneously uncovering an intriguing episode in the artist's personal life. This small selection of his work is fragile and damaged in places due to being hidden by the artist in the attic of a relative for 45 years and discovered only in 2009.

No end date specified

David Bomberg: A Pioneer of Modernism

David Bomberg, a prominent member of the Whitechapel Boys, was initially appreciated for his chromolithography (multi-colour prints). Later in life, he and Jacob Epstein co-curated the so-called “Jewish section” at the Whitechapel Art Gallery show, 20th-Century Art: A Review of Modern Movements, before serving in World War I. His post-war disillusionment is most powerfully expressed in Ghetto Theatre (1920), following which he began focusing on portraits of friends and family, as well as a series of self-portraits. He then produced many drawings and paintings about World War II and later became a teacher at Borough Polytechnic (now South Bank University).

No end date specified

ONLINE. https://benuri.org

John Rylands Research Institute and Library, Manchester

The Many Faces of the Rylands’ Jewish Manuscripts

Manchester university celebrates the digital revolution by compiling 30 years of Hebrew manuscripts. The 400+ articles display exemplary literary and artistic style, spanning the 14th to 19th centuries, including an early 1400s Sephardi Haggadah and a text of Nachmanides' Commentary on the Pentateuch, containing illuminations by the Florentine artist Francesco Antonio del Cherico. The curators owe their thanks to the collections of Enriqueta Rylands, who founded the John Rylands Library in 1900, and Moses Gaster, the Haham (Chief Rabbi) of the Sephardi community in London. 

ONLINE. www.manchester.ac.uk 

 

Memory Map of the Jewish East End

Artist and writer Rachel Lichtenstein and The Bartlett research units present a new digital resource that allows you to explore former sites of Jewish memory in east London. On it you will find photographs and essays of more than 70 sites in the area, plus audio interviews with residents and testimony from the collection at Sandys Row, the oldest Ashkenazi synagogue in the capital.

ONLINE. https://jewisheastendmemorymap.org


Jewish Museum London

Jewish Britain: A History in 50 Objects

Highlights from the Jewish Museum London’s extensive collection. Each object tells a story about the history of the Jewish community in Britain, from medieval to modern times.

ONLINE. www.jewishmuseumlondon.org.uk

Wiener Holocaust Library

A is for Adolf: Teaching German Children Nazi Values

The four parts of this display – School, Experiences of Jewish Children, The Hitler Youth and Beyond School – portray the various ways that the Nazis tried to influence German children both at school and in other parts of life. Nazi propaganda sought to shape every aspect of young people’s thoughts through books, games and toys.

No end date specified

Berlin/London: The Lost Photographs of Gerty Simon

Gerty Simon was a German-Jewish photographer renowned for her portraits of important political and artistic figures in Weimar Berlin and interwar London. Described as the most brilliant and original of Berlin photographers, this exhibition features many of her works which were forgotten when she stopped taking professional photographs in the late 1930s.

No end date specified

Dilemmas, Choices, Responses: Britain and the Holocaust

While Britain’s role in fighting the Nazis during World War II is well known, its response to the Holocaust is less familiar. The British government was aware of the mass murder of the Jews and the matter was discussed in Parliament, as well as in the press, but how long was it before they went to war? And did they go to save the Jews or for other reasons?

No end date specified

Fate Unknown: The Search for the Missing after the Holocaust

The complicated history of the search for the missing after the Holocaust and the impact today of fates that remain unknown are examined. The aftermath of the Holocaust caused European chaos, with millions of people either murdered or displaced and many missing, with the fates of some remaining undetermined more than 70 years.

No end date specified

Fighting Antisemitism from Dreyfus to Today

Curated partly in response to the worrying trends in contemporary antisemitism, this exhibition reveals the history of the fight against Jewish prejudice over the last century in Europe since the Dreyfus Affair in 1890s France. Unique and never-before-seen documents as well as photographs from CST (Community Security Trust) archives spotlight the stories of the individuals, organisations and campaigns resisting Jewish discrimination.

No end date specified

Holocaust Letters

How much did those persecuted during the Holocaust understand what was happening to them? This exhibition examines correspondence of the era to find out, looking at how people exchanged information across borders in defiance of censors, deportations and destruction. See how survivors and their relatives preserved letters from the wartime period and how seemingly ordinary objects became precious symbols of what was lost.

No end date specified

Jewish Resistance to the Holocaust

During the Holocaust, resistance groups launched attacks, sabotage operations and rescue missions against the Nazis. Understand the stories of incredible endurance and bravery of the Jewish people who, as the Holocaust unfolded around them, and at great risk to themselves, fought against the Nazis and their collaborators. Featuring names such as Tosia Altman, the Bielski brothers, Ruth Wiener and Anne Frank, learn about the experience of those with incredible endurance and bravery.

No end date specified

On British Soil: Victims of Nazi Persecution in the Channel Islands

The story of the many thousands of slave labourers, political prisoners and Jews persecuted during the German occupation of the Channel Islands in 1940-1945 has been largely omitted from British history. This exhibition redefines their experiences, based on the research of Dr Gilly Carr (Cambridge University).

No end date specified

Science and Suffering: Victims and Perpetrators of Nazi Human Experimentation

Science and Nazi ideology worked together during the Holocaust to shape a new vision for a ‘radically pure’ Europe, with scientists seizing the opportunity to advance medical research. They did this by performing cruel and often fatal experiments on thousands of Jews and other ‘undesirables’. The coerced experimentation in Nazi-dominated Europe is explored, along with the legacy of medical research under Nazism and its impact on bioethics and research today at its core.

No end date specified

Tarnschriften: Covert Resistance in the Third Reich

The Wiener Library presents the largest collection of camouflaged anti-fascist propaganda outside of Germany. Materials containing tarnschriften (hidden writings) were concealed in everyday items such as pamphlets and books. The objects display the creative approaches that anti-Nazi resistors took to defy threats of deportation, imprisonment and death by distributing messages promoting an alternative political discourse in Nazi Germany.

No end date specified

The Boy Alone in Nazi Vienna

A cache of 40 letters discovered in a UK loft, and subsequently digitised, document the prelude to an unusual experience of the Kindertransport operation from the perspective of a child. A boy in Vienna wrote to his mother, who was already in the UK, over the course of an agonising four-month separation, during which time both were working frantically towards a reunion they could not guarantee would be able to happen.

No end date specified

The Kitchener Camp

In 1939, a now derelict army base on the Kent coast was the scene of an extraordinary rescue, saving 4,000 men from the Holocaust. The Kitchener rescue, founded and run by Jewish aid organisations that had funded and coordinated the Kindertransport, was a place of refuge to those who had to leave behind their loved ones in the Third Reich. The online project brings together scattered, uncatalogued archives to rebuild the wider history of descendent families.

No end date specified

The Perfect Hideout: Jewish and Nazi Havens in Latin America

Following the Nazi accession to power in 1933, 10 percent of the German Jewish population fled the country, creating the first wave of immigrants. By late 1941, it is estimated that half a million Jews had managed to escape Nazi-occupied territory, thousands of whom eventually emigrated to South America on tourist visas. However, Nazi propaganda fuelled the already present antisemitism there and a rise in Nazis hiding in Latin America during the post-war period changed their names to conceal their former identities.

No end date specified

ONLINE. www.wienerlibrary.co.uk

BOOKS & POETRY

 

Sunday 5 May

A Night of Jewish History

Authors Andrea Hammel and John Eidinow discuss their current books (The Kindertransport: What Really Happened and Esther Simpson, respectively) with David Herman. The former uncovering the uncomfortable truths at the heart of the wartime success that saved some 10,000 children and young people from Nazi persecution. The latter follows a woman who devoted her life to resettling academic refugees, some of whom went on to become Nobel Prize winners, Knights, fellows of the Royal Society and fellows of the British Academy. Both Hammel and Eidinow will be answering audience questions and copies of both books will be available for sale from an online bookseller.

7pm. FREE. ONLINE. www.barnet-libraries.played.co

Tuesday 7 May – Tuesday 24 September

Book Club: We Have Reason to Believe

This weekly virtual book club tackles We Have Reason to Believe by the late Rabbi Louis Jacobs. Written in the 1950s, the book ended up becoming the basis for the ‘Jacobs Affair’, during which Rabbi Jacobs’ appointment to an Orthodox rabbinic position was vetoed due to his modern view that the Torah was not in fact dictated word-for-word to Moses from God. This led to a backlash from the United Synagogue and the establishment of Masorti Judaism in the UK. Each chapter will be considered in turn and participants will discuss how the ideas in the book can inspire an approach to traditional but non-fundamentalist Jewish theology.

6.30pm. £72. ONLINE. www.louisjacobs.org

Wednesday 20 May

The Postcard

Anne Berest’s latest book, The Postcard, is a poignant tale of mothers and daughters, painting a vivid portrait of 20th-century Parisian intellectual and artistic life. Fifteen years after Berest received an anonymous postcard featuring the names of her maternal great-grandparents and their children, all of whom were killed in Auschwitz, she was moved to discover who sent it and why. With the help of various family members, friends and a private investigator, the author embarked on a journey to discover the fate of the Rabinovitch family, creating a moving saga of a family devastated by the Holocaust and partly restored through the power of storytelling.

6.30pm. FREE. ONLINE. www.wienerholocaustlibrary.org

AVAILABLE INDEFINITELY

Unseen: Photographs by Wolf Suschitzky, Dorothy Bohm and Neil Libbert

Three photographers, Wolf Suschitzky, Dorothy Bohm and Neil Libbert, present their responses to London, Paris and New York, photographing it without prejudice or expectation.

FREE. ONLINE. www.benuri.org

FILM & TV

 

Friday 3 May

Red Herring

Kit Vincent, a young filmmaker, documents those closest to him after discovering his terminal diagnosis. Vincent’s father, who along with his divorced wife are naturally struggling with the reality of the decline in their son’s health, decides to convert to Judaism; a process reflecting on the absurdity of the things we do to find solace in times of desperation. Red Herring dances between humour and grief, to portray the emotions behind the relationships that keep us going through tragedy.

Price TBC. ONLINE. www.bulldog-film.com/films/red-herring/

Available indefinitely

Solomon & Gaenor

In what may be the only time you will hear Welsh and Yiddish spoken in the same film, Solomon & Gaenor is an Oscar-nominated classic shining a rare spotlight on the little-known Welsh Jewish community. The touching and memorable love story focuses on two young people –Jewish Solomon, who hides his Orthodox heritage, and Christian Gaenor, who wants to escape her stifling family life. Both risk their families’ wrath amidst a looming miner’s strike in the background, provoking tensions and prejudices, further threatening the lovers’ happiness.

£3.99. ONLINE. https://ukjewishfilm.org

Other People’s Children

A bittersweet drama following Rachel, a single Jewish woman nearing 40, who appears content with the life that sees her falling in love with Ali and his four-year-old daughter Leila. However, their relationship, while filling Rachel with joy, only serves to remind her of her own childlessness, resurfacing feelings of regret about not becoming a parent when she had the chance. A bittersweet drama following Rachel, a single Jewish woman nearing 40, who appears content with the life that sees her falling in love with Ali and his four-year-old daughter Leila. However, their relationship, while filling Rachel with joy, only serves to remind her of her own childlessness, resurfacing feelings of regret about not becoming a parent when she had the chance.

£4.99. ONLINE. https://ukjewishfilm.org

Daughter of the Waves: Memoirs of Growing Up in Pre-War Palestine

The relaunch of Ruth Jordan’s autobiography. This poignant memoir follows her upbringing in British Mandate Palestine, as well as her career as a journalist – she was the first female news presenter on the BBC World Service Hebrew Section – and beyond. Jordan’s children, Sharon and Oran Kivity, share their mother’s journey 40 years after the book’s first launch, and speak to a former colleague of Jordan’s, the journalist, author and music expert Norman Lebrecht, to remember her life and work.

FREE. ONLINE. www.youtube.com/watch?v=411_740BUBg

Birds of Passage

Hormazd Narielwalla’s 11th ‘bookwork’ (a piece of art that folds into a book) draws comparisons between certain members of gay communities and birds, both moving from country to country seeking somewhere to live safely and comfortably. It is inspired by the artist’s own motivation for migrating to the UK from India to celebrate his sexuality and creativity. Learn more in this intimate, video exploration of the artwork presented by the Ben Uri Gallery and narrated by Dr Shaun Cole, who wrote the introduction to Birds of Passage.

FREE. ONLINE. www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuRrVGnoNCI

Servant of the People

When Jewish comedian Volodymyr Zelenskyy co-wrote and starred in Servant of the People, a comedy series about a history teacher (Zelenskyy) who finds himself elected president, little did he know that life was to imitate art. Flash forward seven years since the show first aired, and Zelenskyy is not only Ukraine's heroic leader, but a household name internationally. It's no surprise then, that Channel 4 opted to interrupt its usual schedule of Sunday night reruns to screen the first three episodes. Catch up with them now on All 4. Read our review of Servant of the People on the JR blog.

FREE. ONLINE. www.channel4.com/programmes/servant-of-the-people 

MUSIC

 

AVailable indefinitely

Alex Weiser: In a Dark Blue Night

Following his Pulitzer Prize-nominated album And All the Days Were Purple, a love letter to New York City, Alex Weiser introduces his new album, In a Dark Blue Night, comprising of two song cycles exploring the city from complementary perspectives. The first cycle features five settings of Yiddish poetry, written by newly arrived immigrants to New York over the 1800s and 1900s, and the second, told through the recorded memories of Weiser’s late grandmother, features vivid, buoyant adventures about childhood in the bustling world of Coney Island in the late 1930s and 40s. Combined, the two cycles explore a little-known chapter of New York City’s history.

£7.93. Online download. www.alexweiser.bandcamp.com

Faiths in Tune

Get a taste of Faiths in Tune, the interfaith music festival that takes place annually in various locations around the world. This playlist of 20 videos features previous performances from different years and countries.

FREE. ONLINE. www.youtube.com/CoexistinterfaithOrgplus 

Music That Survived the Nazis

There’s a common idea that music created in Nazi Germany was only for propoganda. Historian Shirli Gibson clears up this misconception with a handful of rare and newly discovered recordings that show just how varied German musical output of the period was. In the first episode, she explores the music of the Jewish Culture League, as well two Jewish record labels, Lukraphon and Semer. Part Two is focused on music-making in the concentration camps and ghettos during World War II. Gibson takes a look at the stories that influenced the creative responses in a variety of ways. 

FREE. ONLINE. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct3c7z?utm

TALKS

 

Monday 29 April

Otti Berger: Weaving for Modernist Architecture

Jewish textile designer Otti Berger (1898-1944), who was murdered in Auschwitz, created fabrics that fundamentally changed the understanding of what textiles could be and do. She was a core member of the experimental approach to textiles at the Bauhaus school in Germany. Despite her entrepreneurial legacy, Berger’s work has only been explored in fragments. Berlin-based artist Judith Raum, contributing editor of Hatje Cantz’s latest publilcation: Otti Berger: Weaving for Modernist Architecture discusses about the comprehensive study of the complexity and beauty of Berger’s work, which also highlights the largely unrecognised significance of textiles in the history of architecture and design.

6pm. FREE. ONLINE. www.insidersoutsidersfestival.org

Wednesday 15 May

On Interviewing and Listening to Survivors

Learn how different contexts impact how survivors of the Holocaust and other historic atrocities are shaped, retold and received. Guest speakers discuss their work in interviewing those who have previously testified; their role in shaping the resulting accounts; and how testimony helps form our understanding of these events throughout history.

7pm. FREE. ONLINE. www.wienerholocaustlibrary.org

Thursday 16 May

The Siege of Sydney Street and the Jewish East End Anarchist Movement

In 1911, Latvian anarchist gunmen, who were wanted for the murder of three London police officers, held out for six hours against armed police and troops in Sidney Street, east London. The fierce controversy provoked by the incident touched on immigration, asylum and antisemitism. Andrew Whitehead, author and honorary professor at the University of Nottingham, discusses the siege.q

8pm. £5. ONLINE. www.jhse.org  

Wednesday 5 June

Songs and Memory in Final Account: Third Reich Testimonies

Luke Holland interviewed hundreds of Germans and Austrians about their memories and involvement in Hitler’s regime, the war and the genocide before going on to make the film Final Account: Third Reich Testimonies. The resulting collection is rare in its ambition to record oral histories from the perpetrators side; most of the interviewees spent their childhood and youth in the Nazi era, all not Jewish, many growing up in the Hitler Youth and its female equivalent, the League of German Girls. Cultural historian and author Zoltán Kékesi talks about his work with the collection, focusing on the vivid memory the interviewees had of songs from a remote past, and the range of emotional responses when asked about them. Even when they refused to sing, songs took interviewees back in time; and with the songs came a multitude of experiences and personal stories.

6.30pm. FREE. The Wiener Holocaust Library, WC1B 5DP. www.wienerholocaustlibrary.org


Available indefinitely

Auld Lang Schmooze

Edinburgh Jewish Cultural Centre’s podcast kicks off with an in-depth conversation with Jewish Renaissance editor Rebecca Taylor and writer David Ian Neville, talking about JR’s Summer 2023 issue and how each edition of the magazine is planned and produced.

FREE. ONLINE. www.jcc.scot

I Belong to Glazgoy

Dr Phil Alexander pieces together the story of Isaac Hirshow, a virtuosic Russian Jewish synagogue cantor and composer, who was one of thousands of Jewish immigrants who arrived in Glasgow from Warsaw in 1922. Alexander excavates Hirshow’s story through archive, oral history, poetry, early recordings and specially performed music.

FREE. ONLINE. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001n1x7

The Black Cantor

Thomas LaRue Jones, an African-American tenor, was known as the Black Cantor, singing Jewish music in the early decades of the 20th century. His soulful voice and perfect Yiddish pronunciation propelled him to fame, performing in synagogues and theatres across America’s East Coast and around Europe. However, after his death in 1954, LaRue Jones all but disappeared from history, leaving behind only one recording, made in 1923. Journalist Maria Margaronis unpacks the mystery of the Black Cantor’s career, looking at what drew him to the music, what his life tells us about race, faith and identity in America 100 years ago, and why he was so quickly forgotten.

FREE. ONLINE. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0fj1ylk

Jewish Quest: Between the Lines Series

This weekly podcast provides a space where Jewish conversation can be free of denominational constraints, inspiring a deep love and knowledge of Jewish learning, teaching and debate. Previous speakers include Zvi Koenigsberg, Professor Mark Leuchter, Dr Kristine Henriksen Garroway and Chazan Jaclyn Chernett.

FREE. ONLINE. https://jewishquest.org 

Anne Frank’s Stepsister: How I Survived Auschwitz 

This raw and unfiltered two-part documentary offers a rare insight into the Frank family’s experience during the Holocaust. It’s a personal account by Eva Schloss, Anne Frank’s step-sister and friend, who describes Anne humorously as ‘Miss Quack-Quack’ (a reference to her chatty personality). In the first episode, Schloss describes her life before Auschwitz and her family’s eventual capture. In part two, she focuses on her experience of the liberation of Auschwitz and her efforts to keep her brother Heinz’s memory alive.  

FREE. ONLINE. www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/w3ct1k4b 

Hardtalk: David Baddiel

BBC World Service presenter Stephen Sacker speaks to writer and comedian David Baddiel, who has a gift for finding the funny in some of the darkest corners of the human psyche. Now he is taking on modern culture, which is often toxic, and asks: is comedy becoming a victim of the culture wars? Baddiel gives as good as he gets in this frank, intelligent one-to-one interview that lives up to its name.

FREE. ONLINE. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3ct1n6f

London’s Holocaust Memorial Day Ceremony 2022

The capital marked Holocaust Memorial Day online again this year, featuring a moving address by Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, alongside testimonies by Holocaust survivor Steven Frank BEM and Eric Murangwa Eugene MBE, survivor of the Rwandan genocide. Violinist Emmanuel Bach opened and closed the event with renditions of Bach’s Sola Sonatas. Watch the entire live-stream of the ceremony on the Mayor’s Office London YouTube channel. 

FREE. ONLINE. www.jmi.org.uk 

 

Opera Arias Reinvented and Holocaust Survivor Rachel Levy

A two-parter celebrating the achievements of Jewish women. Hear from violinist Charlotte Maclet about the award-winning, all-female string quartet Zaïde, and Rachel Levy, who is one of seven Holocaust survivors featured in the Portraits of the Holocaust project commissioned by the Prince of Wales.

FREE. ONLINE. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0013rn0

How Things are Done in Odessa

Odessa is living through Russia’s war against Ukraine. Despite being fiercely independent from Moscow and Kiev, its legendary past and nexus of global trade has given the city a reputation of possibility and promise. Old Odessa gave rise to a flourishing creative community, including poets, writers, musicians and comedians. Musician Alec Koypt, shipping proprietor Roman Morgenshtern, journalist Vlad Davidson, translator and JR contributor Boris Dralyuk, poets Boris and Lyudmila Kershonsky and others narrate this Odesan story.

FREE. ONLINE. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0ctvzj8

The Exchange - Breaking with Tradition

Emily and John, who share a common experience, meet for the first time, each bearing a gift for the other – an object that unlocks their story. Presenter Catherine Carr assists in the two sharing their personal experiences and uncovering the differences between them. Having both grown up in strict religious communities, religious laws governed everything from their clothes to diet, and each community maintained a degree of separation from the ‘secular’ world. John, raised within the Amish community of America, had minimal contact with the outside world. Emily grew up in London’s Chasidic Jewish community, speaking Yiddish and obeying strict laws about physical contact between the genders. Both John and Emily broke away from their lives and, together, they share the challenges of growing up with rules they found impossible to relate to their personal needs. Carr discusses the way in which they both adjusted to life on ‘the outside’, embracing new freedoms that were out of reach for so many years.

FREE. ONLINE. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001brqg 

THEATRE

 

Available indefinitely

The End of the Night

A chance to stream Ben Brown’s phenomenal play, The End of the Night, directed by Alan Strachan and performed at Park Theatre. A singular meeting between a Jew and a Nazi during World War II is the main focus. As the war is coming to an end, Dr Felix Kersten, Himmler’s personal physiotherapist, uses his unique position of influence to facilitate a meeting between the architect of the Holocaust and Swedish Jew Norbert Masur, a member of the World Jewish Congress. Can Masur and Kersten turn Himmler’s thoughts away from the downfall of the Third Reich and towards a course of action that could save thousands of lives? It’s a joint attempt to release the last surviving Jews from concentration camps, contrary to Hitler’s orders that no Jew should outlast the regime. Read our review of The End of the Night on the JR blog and hear our interview with playwright Ben Brown on JR OutLoud.

From £20/a. ONLINE. https://originaltheatreonline.com 

Otvetka

Under the shadow of an imminent Russian attack, a woman tries to hold her shattered life together after the father of her unborn child is killed in the Donbas region by a sniper. Suddenly, her phone pings with a delighted message from a friend on the other side of the border, inviting her to a wedding. How will she respond? Written by leading Ukrainian playwright Neda Nezhdana, this explosive monodrama confronts not only the war between Russia and Ukraine, but increased unrest sparked by fake news around the world. Dedicated to Ukrainian opera singer Vasyl Slipak, who went to war as a volunteer and died in the trenches of Donbas after being shot by a sniper, Otvetka (meaning ‘answers’ and ‘retaliation’ in Ukrainian) is currently being performed in Ukraine, despite constant interruptions from air-raid sirens. This stream is part of Finborough Theatre’s new digital initiative, #FinboroughFrontier, and part of the Worldwide Ukrainian Play Reading Series, a collaboration with the Theatre of Playwrights in Kyiv to read new Ukrainian plays around the world.

FREE. ONLINE. www.youtube.com/finboroughtheatre

Until Wednesday 1 May

Queer Jewish Journeys in Media

Stav Meishar, award-wining stage artist, academic researcher and educator, explores the intersection of both Jewish and queer identities in film, television and theatre. Do these identities influence each other or are they independent? What does it mean for characters to be Jewish and queer, and how does it shape their trajectories? In these sessions, Meishar will analyse these questions using excerpts from works including: Angels in America, the groundbreaking two-part play about the AIDS crisis in the 1980s by Tony Kushner; Transparent, Joey Soloway’s TV series about a Jewish American family coming to terms with their father’s transitioning to a woman; Bent, Martin Sherman’s play about the persecution of gay people in Nazi Germany; and Yentl, Barbra Streisand’s film adaptation of the Isaac Bashevis Singer short story, Yentl the Yeshiva Boy.

7pm. Price TBC. ONLINE. www.paideiafolkhogskola.se

UNTIL Wednesday 1 May

The Jewish Storytelling of Broadway

Jewish composers and lyricists have been making their mark in musical theatre since the early 20th century. But how did the artists’ Jewish heritage find its way into their work? Alongside historic and cultural analysis, award-winning multidisciplinary stage artist Stav Meishar presents excerpts of songs and scenes from the repertoire of Jewish legends to uncover their hidden social context.

4.30pm. Price TBC. ONLINE. www.paideiafolkhogskola.se

Tuesday 23 April – Tuesday 14 May

Playing Sekund Fidl

Ilana Cravitz, one of the world’s leading klezmer fiddlers presents a course of four sessions, looking at all aspects of klezmer music, including: chord shapes; rhythms and patterns; applying principles to klezmer tunes and developing your own style. There will also be opportunities to practice and for individual tuition.

6.30pm. £45/£15 per session. ONLINE. www.ilanacravitz.com

WORKSHOPS