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缅北强奸:

This series is made possible by the 缅北强奸 Foundation through the Edward D. and Regina Rechnic Speaker Series Endowment. The endowment was established by the late Irene C. Rechnic and honors her parents' struggle to survive the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp during WWII, where 960,000 Jews were executed.听听听

Film Series


Wednesday, February 25

Kleymeyer Hall (LA0101)

6 p.m.

The Stranger (1946)

The Stranger follows a Nazi war criminal hiding in a quiet American town after World War II, living under an assumed identity as a respected schoolteacher. His past begins to unravel when a government investigator tracks him down and the truth emerges through a tense confrontation involving his new wife and the town’s iconic clock tower.

Death Mills (1945)

Death Mills is a 1945 American documentary short that presents graphic evidence of Nazi concentration camps, using footage shot by Allied forces to document mass murder and human suffering. It was created to inform both the public and German civilians of the scale and reality of Nazi atrocities at the end of World War II.

Thursday, February 26

Kleymeyer Hall (LA0101)

6 p.m.

France Divided (2011)

France Divided examines the deep political and moral fractures within France during World War II, focusing on the tensions between collaboration with Nazi Germany and resistance to occupation. Through historical analysis and personal accounts, the documentary shows how these divisions shaped French society during the war and continued to influence national memory afterward.

The Forger (2016)

The Forger is a documentary about Adolfo Kaminsky, a master forger who used his skills during World War II to create false documents that saved thousands of Jews and resistance fighters from Nazi persecution. The film traces his moral convictions, secretive life, and the personal cost of dedicating his talents to clandestine resistance work.

Upcoming Presentation


Check back for our upcoming presentation in Fall 2026

Past Presentations

Dr. Wolf Gruner

6 p.m.
Tuesday, September 30
Carter Hall

An internationally acclaimed expert on the Holocaust and genocide, Gruner has authored more than 30 journal articles and book chapters while writing or editing over 20 books. He is the recipient of numerous national and international awards and honors for his teaching, academic achievements and tireless work to understand and combat genocide. Most recently, he published the prizewinning book,Resisters: How Ordinary Jews Fought Persecution in Hitler's Germany.听

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David talks with Dr. Wolf Gruner, a Holocaust and Genocide Scholar, and Dr. Todd J. Schroer, Chair of the Criminal Justice Department at The 缅北强奸. Dr. Gruner is the 2025 Rechnic Holocaust speaker at 缅北强奸. He tells the story of how ordinary Jews resisted the Nazis in Hitler's Germany.

Judy Cohen

7 p.m.
Thursday, January 23
Performance Center

As the former Chief Acquisitions Curator at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Cohen was instrumental in preserving Holocaust history through the Museum鈥檚 extensive collections. A graduate of Harvard University with a master鈥檚 degree from Brandeis, she curated numerous web exhibits and authored works that examined distinct facets of Holocaust documentation, including Memento Mori: Photographs from the Grave, Three Approaches to Exploring the H枚cker Album and Jewish Ghetto Photographers. Her research brought critical insight into the lives captured by Jewish photographers and the personal artifacts that reflected life in Europe before and during the Holocaust.

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Margaret McMullan

7-8 p.m.
Monday, September 18
Carter Hall

McMullan鈥檚 presentation explored her memoir,Where the Angels Lived: One Family鈥檚 Story of Exile, Loss, and Return, and shared her family鈥檚 journey to P茅cs, Hungary, where she uncovered her Jewish ancestry, a part of her past her grandfather kept hidden. In her memoir, the moment McMullan discovers the existence of Rich谩rd Engel de J谩nosi, a long-lost relative, at Israel鈥檚 Holocaust Museum, she begins her quest to uncover the forgotten history of her ancestors. In her presentation, she will also discuss Hungary, the spread of authoritarianism and what we, as a society, can do to put an end to it.听

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Charles L. Berger

7-8 p.m.
Wednesday, September 28
Carter Hall

Berger, the 2022 Regina Rechnic Holocaust Series keynote speaker, was born in Evansville in 1947. He graduated from the University of Evansville in 1969 and received his law degree with honors from Indiana University School of Law in Indianapolis in 1972. After law school, Berger returned to Evansville and went into practice with his father, Sydney, who founded Berger & Berger, LLP in 1946, a firm known for representing the working class in Evansville.

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