A live discussion between Judy Cohen and Elin Beaumont on women’s experiences during the Holocaust, the process of memoir writing at age 90 and the challenges Judy faced as an immigrant in a new country. 

Category

judy

Please join us for a meaningful program as the Azrieli Foundation’s Holocaust Survivor Memoirs Program launches the publication of Judy Cohen’s memoir: A Cry in Unison. Viewers will have the opportunity to watch a short video featuring Judy telling parts of her story, followed by a live discussion between Judy Cohen and Elin Beaumont on women’s experiences during the Holocaust, the process of memoir writing at age 90 and the challenges Judy faced as an immigrant in a new country.

Click here to watch it live!

 

Register your FREE account on Virtual JCC.

Step 1: Visit VirtualJCC.com/register and fill in your information into the Create a free account now section.

Step 2: Go to Live Stream section and look for the session you are interested in watching. If you can’t find it, go to the top right search tool.

Step 3: Click on stream and wait for it to begin. Use the chat box to ask questions.

Presented by:

A Kultura Collective Member

In Partnership with:

Presented by the Azrieli Foundation in partnership with the Sarah and Chaim Neuberger Holocaust Education Centre, Schwartz/Reisman Centre, and Prosserman JCC

Start Date: September 14, 2020

7:30 PM

Virtual

Virtual J

Website:

Free

Accessibility

If accessibility options not listed, please contact the venue to confirm

Share
Share
Share

Related Events

Happening Now

September 4, 2023

to June 26, 2026

The Toronto Holocaust Museum is proud to offer specially designed resources to assist educators in teaching about the complex history of the Holocaust. 

Last Chance

June 8, 2026

Eastern Europe was a crucial site of atrocity, complicity, and resistance during the Second World War; examining it today helps us understand the dangers of normalizing hate.

Upcoming

June 10, 2026

to June 13, 2026

Belgian-Israeli cartoonist Michel Kichka is a second-generation Holocaust survivor whose art is deeply shaped by memory, history, and family legacy.

Upcoming

June 11, 2026

Holofiction invites audiences to reflect on the ethics and responsibility of cinematic storytelling, urging a deeper understanding of how these representations shape collective memory and historical perception.