Projects for Teachers
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Dear friends, we sincerely invite you to watch the educational webinar “Why Jews need Jewish education”, organized by “Tkuma” Institute and “Bet Hana” International Humanitarian and Pedagogical Institute. This time Rima Aronova, candidate of pedagogical sciences, rector of “Bet Hana” International Humanitarian and Pedagogical Institute (Dnipro) became our guest.
Read more: Educational webinar “Why Jews need Jewish education”
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On May 26, the last webinar in this academic year “Fair criticism of the lessons, hate language and fakes instead of justice”, organized by the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, “Tkuma” Ukrainian Institute for Holocaust Studies, Museum “Jewish Memory and Holocaust in Ukraine”, “Orion” Ukrainian Educational Publishing Center (Kyiv) was held.
Read more: Webinar “Fair criticism of the lessons, hate language and fakes instead of justice”
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On May 19, next “historical webinar” organized by “Tkuma” Ukrainian Institute for Holocaust Studies and “Orion” Ukrainian Educational Publishing Center (Kyiv) on “Deportation of Crimean Tatar people and ethnic communities of Crimea: Soviet crime, which has a sequel” was held.
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“Tkuma” Ukrainian Institute for Holocaust Studies organized a historical webinar “The memory of the war and “the war of the memories” dedicated the Day of Remembrance and Reconciliation and the 75th anniversary of the victory over Nazism in World War II. The webinar was unique in the composition of participants and speakers of the project.
This time we managed to gather all together the leading Ukrainian scientists, researchers on World War II history in the one broadcast:
- Vladyslav Hrynevych, candidate of historical sciences, doctor of political sciences, director of Institute of Territory and Landscape Research of Babyn Yar memory, leading researcher of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Kuras Institute of Political and Ethnic Sciences, member of the UJE academic council (Canada – USA), member of the Ukrainian-German Commission of Historians (Kyiv);
- Yaroslav Hrytsak, doctor of historical sciences, professor of Ukrainian Catholic University, Honorary Professor of the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, director of the Institute of Historical Researches of the Ivan Franko Lviv National University, co-chair of the Ukrainian-German Commission of Historians, editor-in-chief of the scientific yearbook “Ukraina moderna” (Lviv);
- Anton Drobovych, candidate of philosophical sciences, head of the Ukrainian Institute of National Remembrance (Kyiv);
- Yurii Shapoval, Ph. D., professor, chief researcher I. F. Kuras Institute of Political and Ethnic Studies of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, head of the Center for Historical Political Sciences (Kyiv).
Dr. Igor Shchupak was the webinar moderator.
Together with respected speakers and viewers of our webinar; history teachers and methodologists, university teachers in general, those who are just interested in history – we were looking for answers to the most pressing and controversial questions of World War II:
- What models of historical memory exist, in particular about World War II, and what model is acceptable for Ukraine?
- Who and how should shape the policy of remembrance of World War II, the Holocaust, Babyn Yar?
- Why is the “war of memories” raging around World War II?
- How we should relate to the “Great Patriotic War” concept?
- How does the memory of war turn into a “quasi-religion”?
- Did “the mass heroism” took place during World War II?
- How should the Ukrainian state and society respect World War II veterans?
- Should we celebrate on May 8th or May 9th?
etc.
The topic of the webinar aroused great interest among the audience – live broadcast in parallel by the Ukrainian Union of Bloggers, only during the first hour of broadcasting the total number exceeded 3 thousand views. The real discussions raised in the broadcast chat.
Many interesting questions we could hear from the teachers: how does Japan interpret the issue of World War II? Is humanity possible in inhuman times? What has been done today in Ukraine to form a model of historical memory? Can Ukrainians who did not fight for Independent Ukraine during the war be Heroes? What is the role of the school, and what is the role of the family in shaping the memory of the war in modern schoolchildren? Particular attention was paid to the discussion of the role of cinema as a way of transmitting the memory of World War II.
Finally, we would like to mention the words of prof. Yaroslav Hrytsak, which sounded during our webinar: “Memory is the strongest reagent produced by the chemistry of our brain. In certain concentrations, this chemistry may be a drug, in other situations it may be a poison. And the question of the border is something we must pay attention to”.
https://tkuma.dp.ua/en/education/projects-for-teachers?start=70#sigProIdd2cf0e81c3
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On April 28, the seventh during the last month historical webinar for educators, organized by “Tkuma” Ukrainian Institute for Holocaust Studies and “Orion” Ukrainian educational publishing center (Kyiv) was held. Topic of the webinar was “UKRAINIAN WORLD WAR II” (devoted to the Day of Remembrance and Reconciliation and the Day of Victory over the Nazi Germany), and it became extremely relevant and interesting for the viewers, which showed the number of the webinar participants. More than three thousand people watched it in just a few hours. And this is only the beginning.