Columbia University
The Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America
Spring 2011 Symposium
“Racially inferior”
Roma, Sinti
and other Holocaust victims
In connection with Holocaust
Remembrance Day
Tuesday,
5:30 -
Free and open to the public
Reservations
are recommended: RSVP at www.italianacademy.columbia.edu
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Welcoming remarks:
Barbara Faedda
(
Speakers:
Krista Hegburg
(
“Unknown Holocaust”:
Roma and Sinti in Hitler’s Europe
Rob Kushen
(Executive Director, European Roma Rights
Centre)
Roma in Today’s Europe: Contemporary
Patterns of Prejudice and Discrimination
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Europe and the United Nations commemorate the
victims of the Shoah each winter on the date of
Auschwitz’s liberation in 1945, and the
Along with the millions of Jews who suffered and died, other minority groups were targeted in the racism and xenophobia of the Nazi and Fascist regimes. The Roma and Sinti (known as Gypsies) were also judged to be "racially inferior," and they faced a fate not dissimilar to that of the Jews. This year, the Italian Academy's Holocaust Remembrance event broadens the focus to look at the plight of this other "racially inferior" group in German-occupied Europe of the 1940s and in present-day Europe.
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About the Speakers:
Krista Hegburg is a Program Officer at the Center for Advanced
Holocaust Studies at the
Robert Kushen is the Executive Director
of the European Roma Rights Centre, an international NGO using legal advocacy,
including strategic litigation, to protect the rights of Roma throughout
He has also been active in the area of health, human rights and
development. From 1999 to 2002, he was the Executive Director of Doctors
of the World, a non-governmental organization committed to addressing health
care problems caused by human rights abuses in the U.S. and around the
world. In 2007-08, he served as the Executive Director of the Harvard
PEPFAR Program, an $80 million/year program that provides HIV treatment
services to 100,000 patients and related technical assistance to health care
workers in Africa.
From 1991-96, he served in the Office of the Legal Adviser of the
U.S. Department of State, where he worked as counsel to the bureau on
counterterrorism, liaison to the International Criminal Tribunals for
Yugoslavia and Rwanda, and negotiated a number of international agreements in
the areas of scientific and environmental cooperation.
He holds a J.D. from Columbia University, a B.A. from Harvard
College in Russian Studies, and is the author of a number of publications in
the area of human rights and non-profit law. He is a member of the New
York Bar Association and the Council on Foreign Relations, and serves on the boards
of several NGOs dealing with human rights, health and development issues.
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The Italian Academy is
located at 1161 Amsterdam Avenue between 116th and 118th streets.
For further information, please contact Allison
Jeffrey (aj211@columbia.edu).