Past Events

Event Format
to
In person

This panel examines the remarkable achievements of the great violinist David Oistrakh (1908-1974).

Recording Available

Ukrainian-American Violinist; Professor of Violin, University of Rochester

Matthews Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of History, Northeastern University

Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies; Boston College; Chair, Seminar on Russian and Eurasian Jewry, Davis Center

to
In person

This panel investigates contributions of the writer, political thinker and Shoah witness Vasily Grossman (1905-1964). Born and raised in Berdichev, Grossman entered the Soviet literary scene in the late 1920s and, following the Nazi invasion, became one of the most famous Soviet frontline journalists. By the late 1950s Grossman’s comparative investigation of Stalinism and Nazim had put him on a collision course with the Soviet regime. Among Grossman’s greatest achievements are “The Hell of Treblinka” and the novels Life and Fate and Forever Flows.

Recording Available

Professor, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland

Author; Scholar

Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies; Boston College; Chair, Seminar on Russian and Eurasian Jewry, Davis Center

to
In person

Marking the 120th birthday of Golda Meir (1898-1978), this panel celebrates the many contributions of the great Zionist leader and Jewish stateswoman.

Recording Available

Charles H. Northam Professor of History, Trinity College

Professor of Law Emeritus, Boston University

Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies; Boston College; Chair, Seminar on Russian and Eurasian Jewry, Davis Center

to
In person

Patricia Herlihy will discuss how in many respects Jews adopted Odessa as their city more than did any other inhabitants.

Recording Available

Professor Emerita, Brown University; Center Associate, Davis Center

Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies; Boston College; Chair, Seminar on Russian and Eurasian Jewry, Davis Center

to
In person

Ellendea Proffer Teasley offers much previously unknown material about the great poet’s life in Leningrad, his leaving Russia and his career in the New World.

Recording Available

Author; Co-founder, Ardis Publishers and Russian Literature Triquarterly

Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies; Boston College; Chair, Seminar on Russian and Eurasian Jewry, Davis Center