USA to Hold Talk on Racial Discrimination in Nazi Germany and the Jim Crow South
Posted on October 10, 2017

The University of South ³ΙΘΛΏμ²₯, with the support of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, will host a talk on βRacial Discrimination & Institutionalized Violence in Nazi Germany and the Jim Crow Southβ from 6-7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 10, at the Terrace Room in the Student Center on Southβs campus. This event is free and open to the public.
According to Dr. David Meola, program organizer and the Bert and Fanny Meisler Assistant Professor of History and Jewish Studies at South ³ΙΘΛΏμ²₯, students, scholars and the campus community will explore the involvement of governments and racial violence in Nazi Germany and the Jim Crow South within their specific historical contexts.
βWe would like to invite the Mobile community to join us in discussing the histories of minority groups who have been oppressed here in ³ΙΘΛΏμ²₯ and in Germany,β Meola noted. βThese timely conversations are important in building relationships and understanding within our communities.β
The panel of speakers will include several scholars and Meola. His talk will be on βJewish German Lives under Siege.β Dr. Kern Jackson, director of African American Studies and assistant professor of English at South, will speak on βWithout Sanctuary: Lynching in ³ΙΘΛΏμ²₯ History.β Dr. Phil Carr, the Chief Calvin McGhee Professor of Native American Studies and director of the Archaeology Museum at South, will speak on βDenial of Equal Education to Native Americans,β and Dr. Jake Newsome, campus outreach program officer at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, will talk about βRace and Violence in the Nazi Campaign against Homosexuality.β