Katharina Matro, Walter Johnson High School
Kama Pierce, National Center for Civil and Human Rights
Mascha Wilke, Stiftung Erinnerung, Verantwortung, und Zukunft
Charles Woods, Birmingham Civil Rights Institute
Session Abstract
Is it possible to learn from history? In 2025, a project bringing together 50 German and US scholars, curators, educators, public historians, civil society leaders, and journalists for two immersive tours provided participants with the opportunity for a deep comparative look at how Germany and the United States have dealt with their difficult pasts. Participants were invited to investigate their respective memory cultures, policies, and their societies’ current challenges with racism, antisemitism, and xenophobia. Participants discussed failures and best practices, and how to transition from denial to collective responsibility in order to maintain a critical memory in schools, universities, and the public sphere. This roundtable will feature some of the group’s participants and invite them to share what they learned as part of the project, how they have carried that learning into their daily work, and whether they believe that historical narrative can be crafted and presented in such a way that an audience will learn from history.