The Gulf Coast Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education's most recent gifts to the Marx Library's Agnes Tennenbaum Holocaust Collection are listed in the document below and include among them the following:
David Gaunt, Naures Atto, Soner O. Barthoma, Let Them Not Return: Sayfo – The Genocide Against the Assyrian, Syriac, and Chaldean Christians in the Ottoman Empire, Berghahn Books, 2018
Jennifer Lemberg & Alexander Pope, eds, Becoming a Holocaust Educator: Purposeful Pedagogy Through Inquiry, Teachers College Press, 2021
Avinoam J. Patt, The Jewish Heroes of Warsaw: The Afterlife of the Revolt, Wayne State University Press, 2021
Leon Saltiel, ed, Do Not Forget Me: Three Jewish Mothers Write to Their Sons from the Thessaloniki Ghetto, by Berghahn Books, 2021
Joanna Sliwa, Jewish Childhood in Kraków: A Microhistory of the Holocaust, Rutgers University Press, 2021
The Agnes Tennenbaum Holocaust Library Collection at the University of South Alabama Libraries constitutes a specially designated collection that was established as a gift from the Gulf Coast Center for Holocaust and Human Rights Education (GCCHHRE). First founded in 2013, this collection is augmented annually through a regular donation of newly selected material. Presently the collection contains over 2000 cataloged titles. It is named in honor of Agnes Tennenbaum (1922-2016), a former resident of Mobile and Holocaust survivor who dedicated her final years to educating the Mobile community on the Holocaust and passing on the memory of those who perished. Engaging with the facts and memories of the Holocaust demonstrates the dangers of unchecked hatred and the need to prevent genocide.
Bookplate placed in books belonging to the Agnes Tennenbaum Holocaust Collection at the Marx Library.