Displaced Persons Camps
As World War II drew to a close, JDC marshalled its forces to meet a crisis of staggering proportions, racing to ensure that tens of thousands of newly liberated Jews would survive to enjoy the fruits of freedom. By late 1945, some 75,000 Jewish survivors of the Nazi horrors had crowded into the displaced-persons (DP) camps that were hastily set up in Germany, Austria, and Italy. Conditions were abominable, with many subjected to anti-Semitism and hostile treatment.
JDC Archives Accepting Applications for 2025 Fellowships
The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) Archives is pleased to announce that it is accepting applications for its 2025 fellowship program. In 2025, three to six fellowships will be awarded to senior scholars, postdoctoral researchers, graduate students,...
read moreMusical Beginnings
Enchanting children through lyrics and song. Abra Cohen, Artifacts Curator and Outreach Coordinator The JDC Archives is no stranger to manuals, booklets, and reports, but when these publications are adorned with colorful illustrations, they are transformed into...
read morePreserving History in the Digital Age: JDC’s Ukraine Crisis Collection
Archivists are overcoming challenges to create a lasting digital legacy. JDC was recently awarded a generous grant from the Charles H. Revson Foundation to document and preserve the organization’s historic and wide-ranging response to the Ukraine conflict in...
read moreJDC Archives Expands Online Access to Critical Records
Additional Holocaust-era documents now available online The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) Archives announces the expanded online availability of digitized archival materials. Researchers and the public can now more easily access a wealth of...
read moreJDC Celebrates Ted Comet’s 100th Birthday
A lifelong Jointnik JDC President Annie Sandler and Ted Comet, New York, 2024; photographer: Romina Hendlin Ralph Goldman, long-time Chief Executive Officer, had a famous line, “Once a Jointnik, always a Jointnik.” Few people illustrate this better than Ted Comet,...
read more2024 JDC Archives Fellows Announced
Supporting cutting-edge research in the JDC Archives The JDC Archives is pleased to announce that it has awarded six new fellowships for 2024. JDC Archives Fellowships are awarded each year to deserving scholars engaged in graduate level, post-doctoral, or independent...
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Public Health Posters in the DP Camps
Fighting disease through awareness Jessica Haba, Artifacts and Ephemera Collection Intern Postwar public health posters uncovered in the JDC Archives illustrate the comprehensive medical programming JDC undertook to assist survivors in the wake of the Holocaust. These...
Artwork and Oranges
A moment of postwar joy shared between Saly Mayer and Jewish refugee children Abra Cohen, Artifacts Curator and Outreach Coordinator Wedged between piles of documents filed away in the folders of archival boxes housed on shelves in warehouses, artifacts and artwork...
JDC Archives Partners with POLIN Museum for Exhibit and Online Mini Course
The JDC Archives is honored to have loaned six archival works to the POLIN Museum in Warsaw for its new exhibit, “1945. Not the End, Not the Beginning,” running through September 2025. On the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, the exhibition illustrates the...