Media releases

  • Public Brock lecture on Jewish history to mark Holocaust Remembrance Day

    MEDIA RELEASE: 21 January 2019 – R00008

    A free public event designed to educate people about the Holocaust and the larger context of the Jewish community is planned for Sunday, Jan. 27.

    Brock University will host the lecture at the Niagara Falls Military Museum in observance of International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

    History Professor Jack Lightstone, past-President and Vice-Chancellor of Brock University, will deliver a public keynote lecture titled “The making of ‘the other’ and its social and political consequences: Lessons from the historical experience of the Jewish people.”

    “The Holocaust was not simply the ‘final solution’ to the ‘Jewish question’ stemming from the minds of Nazis, but the result of 1,700 years of virulent anti-Judaic rhetoric, primarily from Christian leadership, beginning in the second century,” says Lightstone. “Its initial purpose was to keep early Christians from being absorbed into the Jewish/Judaic community in the Roman world. These cast the Jews as the ultimate ‘other.’”

    Increased secularization and the rise of modern nationalism led to this anti-Jewish rhetoric and policy being translated into nationalist rhetoric and giving rise to anti-Semitism in Europe, where it was exploited by Russia and Germany for political ends.

    “There is a lesson to be learned from all this,” says Lightstone. “Not just about Jews, but about ‘otherizing’ others for any limited purpose.”

    The upcoming event’s aim to educate people about the Jewish community is particularly important during the current resurgence of virulent anti-Semitism, says Elizabeth Vlossak, Associate Professor of History and co-founder of The History Lab.

    “The event is about remembering the victims, the impact on survivors and what drives a society to do this,” says Vlossak.

    “Anti-Semitism is alive and well throughout Europe as well as Canada and the U.S. — and it is virulent and violent,” she adds, referencing the murder of Jews in a Pittsburg synagogue, the recent vandalism of the Sofia Synagogue in Bulgaria, and a study showing that two-thirds of American millennials could not identify what Auschwitz is.

    Holocaust Remembrance Day has been recognized as an international day of commemoration of the victims of the Holocaust by the United Nations since 2015.

    The event is a collaboration between the History Lab, the Department of History, Seedling for Change in Society and Environment (SCS&E), and the Niagara Falls Military Museum.
    Vlossak and Suescun Pozas are Founding Fellow Associates and research fellows of the History Lab and Associate Professors in the Department of History. The History Lab is a partnership between the Niagara Military Museum and SCS&E. Suescun Pozas is also the Founding President of SCS&E.

    What: Honouring International Holocaust Remembrance Day
    When: Sunday, Jan. 27, 2 to 4 p.m. (Doors open at 1:30 p.m.)
    Where: The Armoury, Niagara Falls Military Museum, Victoria Avenue, Niagara Falls
    NOTE: This event will be held on the second floor and there is no elevator in the building.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Rescheduled dementia event set for Jan. 31

    MEDIA RELEASE: 16 January 2019 – R00007

    After inclement weather put Demystifying Dementia on hold last fall, the much-anticipated Brock event has been rescheduled for later this month.

    The much-anticipated Brock panel has been rescheduled for Thursday, Jan. 31 at 6:30 p.m. in Sean O’Sullivan Theatre.

    Co-hosted by Brock University’s Centre for Lifespan Development Research and the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Demystifying Dementia will help raise awareness about the increasing prevalence of dementia in Niagara and the many agencies and partners across the region that have taken on the roles of education, prevention, intervention and research targeting memory-related issues.

    The event will see Lynn McCleary, Associate Professor of Nursing, explain what dementia is, why we shouldn’t assume that it is a normal part of aging, and how, through education, stigmas may be broken down.

    “I hope this panel will become a platform for people to be able to talk with each other about their symptoms and how to have a good life with dementia,” McCleary says. “Unfortunately, many are afraid to tell someone they are having difficulty. We hope to shift this perspective.”

    McCleary and Recreation and Leisure Studies Associate Professor Colleen Whyte will join a panel of representatives from the community to provide an overview of recent and ongoing Brock research as well as resources available in Niagara.

    Topics will include the prevalence of dementia and how the likelihood of it developing increases with age, diagnosis and transitions in care. Findings from research will also highlight how friendships are sustained for people living with dementia, as well as the role of music among older adults with dementia.

    Panel members will also include: Melanie Elliott (MA ’17), Research Associate with Methologica Inc.; Naomi O’Brien, Respite Services Manager with Niagara Region’s Community Programs for Seniors; and Jessica Pace, Education Co-ordinator with the Alzheimer Society of Niagara Region.

    The event is free and open to the public, but online RSVP through brockdementiapanel2019.eventbrite.ca is required as space is limited. Free parking is available in Lot D.

    What: Demystifying Dementia — Lessons from research and community programming
    Who: The event is open to anyone interested in learning more about dementia, including the general public, policy-makers, organizations, educators and practitioners
    When: Thursday, Jan. 31 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.
    Where: Brock University, Sean O’Sullivan Theatre, 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way, St. Catharines.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases