Awareness of the Holocaust means preserving the memory and drawing from its educational energy to fight antisemitism, racism and group-based hatred today.
Our projects
Find out more about our projects on National Socialism, the Holocaust and its aftermath.
Landecker Digital Memory Lab
Exploring how Holocaust museums, memorials and archives can make better use of digital technologies
MARCHIVUM
Remember. The Children of Bullenhuser Damm.
Academic Research Grant
Research projects on National Socialism and the Holocaust, on Antisemitism and group hatred, impact and aftermath
Lecturer Program
Post-doc program on methodologically innovative Holocaust research
Belongings
Digital Game on Family Memories of the Nazi Era
A digital game to encourage explorations of one’s own family history
Auschwitz Prisoner Art
On the 80th anniversary of Auschwitz's liberation: A new exhibition of artworks by prisoners and survivors is being created
Claude Lanzmanns Audio-Archive
Shoah Stories
Support Fund for Holocaust Survivors
Support Fund for Holocaust Survivors: Supporting survivors and their families
Beyond Auschwitz
SPORTS. CROWDS. POWER.
Introducing: An international research project on deportation photos from the Nazi era
Introducing: Blind spot – The Remembrance of the Holocaust in Ukraine in German-Jewish Memory Culture
Introducing MARCHIVUM: Multimedia and interactive commemoration in Alfred Landecker's hometown Mannheim.
Introducing
Remember. The Children of Bullenhuser Damm.
A Landecker Digital Remembrance Game
Presenting the third cohort: we welcome outstanding Landecker Lecturers Anna Danilina, Irina Makhalova, Irina Rebrova and Marc Volovici!
Restitution as a founding act. Dan Diner on the 70th anniversary of the Reparations Agreement in Luxembourg.
Was Grandpa a Nazi? Why we need to confront our own family histories. By Steffen Jost
The politicisation of migration policy in the UK. By Eliana Hadjisavvas and Sebastian Musch.