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Open Academic seminar of the Centre. Monika Stolarczyk‑Bilardie will deliver a lecture entitled Mobile Witnesses and Transnational Networks: Foreign Intermediaries and the Polish Church Hierarchy in the Face of the Holocaust (1941–1943). Open Academic Seminar
Monika Sotlarczyk-Bilardie
Mobile Witnesses and Transnational Networks: Foreign Intermediaries and the Polish Church Hierarchy in the Face of the Holocaust (1941–1943).
The meeting will take place on
Wednesday, June 24th, in Room 161 at Staszic Pal... Open Academic seminar of the Centre. Wioletta Wejman - I Remember This. The Holocaust in the Memories of Witnesses Otwarte Seminarium Naukowe
Wioletta Wejmann
“I Remember This.” The Holocaust in the Memories of Witnesses: Testimonies from the Oral History Archive of the “Grodzka Gate – NN Theatre” Centre in Lublin.
The meeti... pen Academic Seminar. Justyna Koszarska-Szulc will deliver a lecture entitled will deliver a paper entitled You’ll swallow a bullet and go where the Jew goes. Postwar Trial Testimonies and the Discourse on the Holocaust Open Academic Seminar
Justyna Koszarska-Szulc
„“You’ll swallow a bullet and go where the Jew goes.” Postwar Trial Testimonies and the Discourse on the Holocaust
The meeting will take place on
Wednesday, April 15, in ... International Academic Conference - Documenting the Holocaust: Testimonies as Historical Evidence
Call for Papers – International Conference „Documenting the Holocaust: Testimonies as Historical Evidence”
“Documenting the Holocaust: Testimonies as Historical Evidence”
The international Conference organized within the framework of the European Hol... Open Academic Seminar -Karolina Panz, Zakopane Highlanders and Jews before the War, during the Holocaust, and in the Immediate Postwar Period Oopen Academic Seminar
Karolina Panz
Zakopane Highlanders and Jews before the War, during the Holocaust, and in the Immediate Postwar Period
Wednesday, January 18, room 161 Staszic Palace (ul. Nowy Swiat St. 72)11.00 A.M.
Online participation v...
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Polish Center for Holocaust Research Nowy Swiat St. 72, 00-330 Warsaw; POLAND; Palac Staszica room 120 e-mail: centrum@holocaustresearch.pl
Open Academic Seminar -Karolina Panz, Zakopane Highlanders and Jews before the War, during the Holocaust, and in the Immediate Postwar Period
Open Academic Seminar -Karolina Panz, Zakopane Highlanders and Jews before the War, during the Holocaust, and in the Immediate Postwar Period03.02.2026 07:36:36
Oopen Academic Seminar
Karolina Panz
Zakopane Highlanders and Jews before the War, during the Holocaust, and in the Immediate Postwar Period

Wednesday, January 18, room 161 Staszic Palace (ul. Nowy Swiat St. 72)11.00 A.M.
Online participation via Zoom is possible. Advance registration is required.
https://tiny.pl/qx_vrmx1h
The history of relations between the Zakopane highlanders and the town’s Jewish residents has long been overshadowed by the existence of the Goralenvolk - the movement promoting the idea of a distinct “Goral nation” - and by the involvement of members of several of Zakopane’s most prominent highlander families. In my presentation, I will examine whether, and in what ways, the understanding of the shared history of Jews and highlanders in Zakopane changes when viewed from a perspective extending beyond the period of the Holocaust.
Karolina Panz is a sociologist, a member of the Polish Center for Holocaust Research, and an assistant professor at the Institute of Slavic Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences. She lives in the Podhale region and has spent more than a decade researching the fate of local Jews during the Holocaust and in the postwar years, while actively engaging in efforts to restore their memory. She has received numerous awards for her social activism and for her courage in addressing difficult historical topics. In 2020, her dissertation on the Jews of Nowy Targ received the First Prize in the Majer Bałaban Competition for the best doctoral dissertation on Jews and Israel, as well as the First Prize in the Inka Brodzka-Wald Competition for the best doctoral dissertation in the humanities. At the end of 2025, it was published in book form (“I Would Like to Tell How a Town Was Destroyed…” The Destruction of the Jewish Community of Nowy Targ). She is a recipient of the Claims Conference Saul Kagan Fellowship in Advanced Shoah Studies (2024/2025). She currently leads the NCN-funded project “Faces of Smuggling on the Polish–Slovak Borderland, 1918–1949.”
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