Holocaust Resource Center Joins National Museum Network

The Sara and Sam Schoffer Holocaust Resource Center at 国产传媒 was recently invited to join the Community of Holocaust Education Centers program by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The program consists of 86 Holocaust education and remembrance organizations across the country.
Galloway, N.J. 鈥 国产传媒鈥檚 Sara and Sam Schoffer Holocaust Resource Center recently joined a select nationwide group of organizations recognized for advancing Holocaust education and remembrance.
The Community of Holocaust Education Centers (CHEC) program consists of 86 Holocaust education and remembrance organizations across the country. These groups participate in training by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., to learn about how its educational resources and historical content can be integrated into existing teacher professional development programs.
The national museum invited Stockton to the CHEC program, making it the fourth in New Jersey and the only center based in the southern part of the state.
This relationship with Stockton is really special because Stockton developed one of the first programs to earn a college degree in studying the Holocaust. It鈥檚 really wonderful to see this new chapter of supporting Stockton through the CHEC program.鈥Christina Chavarria, program manager for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
Irvin Moreno-Rodriguez, director of Stockton鈥檚 center, said the HRC has always had a close relationship to the U.S. museum, but he鈥檚 excited about the prospects that joining the network will bring to the university.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a confirmation of all the wonderful work that we鈥檝e been doing over the past few years, and the historic work that鈥檚 been done under the previous center director, Gail Hirsch Rosenthal,鈥 he said. Rosenthal was the director of the HRC from 1991 until her death in October 2023. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to bring all of the resources of a national museum here to our southern New Jersey community.鈥
Chavarria said the CHEC program will provide several benefits to Stockton鈥檚 HRC as part of a two-year introductory cohort, including:
- Training of best practices in Holocaust education using the national museum鈥檚 collection and subject matter expertise.
- Integration of the national museum鈥檚 content and resources on Stockton鈥檚 website and into the HRC鈥檚 teacher professional development programs.
- Monthly learning and networking opportunities with other CHEC partners.
After those two years, CHEC partners remain engaged and meet regularly with the national museum and others in the program to learn from leading educators, experts and each other to advance Holocaust education, memory and awareness.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really exciting because what the CHEC program does is it encourages us to work together to support Holocaust education. It has helped to break down the silos between organizations,鈥 Chavarria said. 鈥淲e often can turn to one another if we need more ideas or different ideas for teacher development or for how our resources help them meet their goals.鈥
Chavarria said the national museum has a series of unique lesson plans that are based on the wealth of primary sources it has collected. Those lesson plans encourage teachers and students to do more critical thinking and examine the Holocaust the way historians do.
One area where both the national museum and Stockton鈥檚 center have initially found synergy is the push to reach new audiences, specifically Spanish-speaking students.
鈥淲e are at the forefront of Spanish language Holocaust education. We are focused on making Holocaust education more inclusive and recognizing that more and more students are coming from Spanish-speaking households and many of those students are first-generation,鈥 said Moreno-Rodriguez, whose family is from Mexico. 鈥淪o, we have to have Spanish language resources for them.鈥
Chavarria said the national museum is undertaking a very large project to translate its lesson plans into Spanish as a way to attract English as a Second Language teachers to bring Holocaust studies into their classrooms. The museum has also translated its Holocaust encyclopedia into Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese.
鈥淭hese lesson plans are free and accessible on our website,鈥 she said. 鈥淪panish is the second most used language of our resources. We have launched a significant project where we鈥檝e collected archives from Latin American countries of Jewish refugees attempting to go there during the Holocaust.鈥
Moreno-Rodriguez has hosted several public forums on campus to bring more attention to the role Latin America played in the Holocaust, and he鈥檚 excited that the new partnership will allow him to continue to share that information with South Jersey teachers.
鈥淭his partnership is a wonderful honor, but it鈥檚 also a challenge to us,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t just reinforces the idea that we still have a lot more to talk about regarding the Holocaust and a lot more to learn to educate the next generation of scholars.鈥
鈥 Story by Mark Melhorn


