Americans and the Holocaust exhibit

August 30, 2024 - October 4, 2024
Mānoa Campus, Hamilton Library - Main Floor

This exhibition is a portrait of American society that shows how the Depression, isolationism, xenophobia, racism, and antisemitism shaped responses to Nazism and the Holocaust. It reveals how much information was available to Americans at the time and asks why rescuing Jews did not become a priority, except for a few individuals who took the risk to help.

Drawing on a remarkable collection of primary sources from the 1930s and 鈥40s, the exhibition focuses on the stories of individuals and groups of Americans who took action in response to Nazism. It will challenge visitors to consider the responsibilities and obstacles faced by individuals鈥攆rom President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to ordinary Americans鈥攚ho made difficult choices, sought to effect change, and, in a few cases, took significant risks to help victims of Nazism even as rescue never became a government priority. The exhibit hopes to challenge people to not only ask 鈥渨hat would I have done?鈥 but also, 鈥渨hat will I do?鈥


Event Sponsor
Library Services, Mānoa Campus

More Information
Clement Guthro, 808-956-7205, guthroc@hawaii.edu,

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