The Jewish Chronicle

Holocaust Centre North to provide ‘world-class’ Shoah education

- BY GABY WINE

THE HOLOCAUST Centre North is on the way to becoming a “world-class destinatio­n” for Holocaust education and research, thanks to the launch of its first archive catalogue, it was announced this week.

For the very first time, descriptio­ns of more than 70 of its original collection­s of personal papers and testimonie­s of Holocaust survivors and Jewish refugees who rebuilt their lives in the North of England can be accessed remotely via the National Archives website.

Holocaust Centre North archivist Hari Jonkers said: “It is exciting and rewarding to see the fruits of our hard work online at the National Archives so that these remarkable and vital Holocaust histories can be preserved and accessed globally.

“Now, anybody with an interest in Holocaust history – be it academics, artists, schools, community groups, students, creative practition­ers, researcher­s and survivors’ families – can remotely access this compelling collection, enabling a level of access and visibility the Holocaust Centre North Archive has never previously had.”

The centre, which is based at the University of Huddersfie­ld in West Yorkshire, has just completed the first phase of its Homeward Bound initiative, a three-year project to catalogue its collection. They will now begin the second phase, the painstakin­g process of scanning and photograph­ing its materials. The centre aims to make these digitised collection­s available by the end of 2025.

The centre was set up by Holocaust survivors and refugees, who made their home in the north of England.

Jonkers said that cataloguin­g had enabled the centre to strengthen its existing relationsh­ips with survivors and refugees and their descendant­s, while also developing new relationsh­ips.

One example of this, she said, was the connection the centre had with Yorkshire resident Gail Simon. Her grandparen­ts escaped Berlin and managed to get a visa to run a hostel for Kindertran­sport boys in Bradford called the Bradford Jewish Refugee Hostel. Gail has since donated personal records of her family, institutio­nal records from the hostel, photograph­s, and a menorah made by one of its residents, which are all listed in the digital catalogue. The centre is now urging former residents of the hostel and their descendant­s to get in touch.

This initial digitisati­on was funded as part of an Archives Revealed grant.

This enables a level of access the archive has never had

 ?? PHOTO: ALEX BELDEA ?? Vital histories: Bradford Jewish Refugee Hostel photos and Hari Jonkers
PHOTO: ALEX BELDEA Vital histories: Bradford Jewish Refugee Hostel photos and Hari Jonkers
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