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November 12, 2025 at 12:00pm EST
In Person & Online
Register to watch online: https://tinyurl.com/y5fab4bt
Register to attend in person: https://tinyurl.com/2pn52zu8
Despite the triumphalist tale that during the Nazi era the United States rescued Europe's intellectual elite, including Albert Einstein and Enrico Fermi, Hannah Arendt and Herbert Marcuse, thousands of European scholars sought to immigrate to the United States and couldn’t. American universities refused to hire them and the State Department erected barriers to letting them in, meaning many lost not only their livelihoods, but also their lives. Dr. Laurel Leff, author of Well Worth Saving: American Universities’ Life and Death Decisions on Refugees from Nazi Europe (Yale University Press, 2019), will introduce a few of those scholars and explain how academic institutions in the United States undertook these fraught choices.
This event is part of the 2025-26 Harriet & Kenneth Kupferberg Holocaust Center (KHC) and National Endowment for the Humanities Colloquium, “Resistance, Resilience and Reinvention: Artists and Academics Escaping Nazism.”
November 12, 2025
12:00 PM
Queensborough Community College
222-05 56th Avenue
Bayside, Queens
Kupferberg Holocaust Center
718-281-5770
Free