Americans and the Holocaust: What Did Americans Know?
Thursday, June 25
7:00pm - 8:00pm
Library Center
Hatch Auditorium (500)Historian Daniel Greene examines Americans’ responses to Nazism and their role in events overseas.
What did Americans know about the dangers of Nazism, and when did they know it? Explore these questions and more as historian Daniel Greene examines the U.S. public's response to Nazism. He will look at domestic conditions — including economic depression, isolationism and antisemitism — that shaped Americans' reactions to atrocities abroad, and why rescuing Europe’s Jews never became a priority for the government or most Americans. This program is part of the "Americans and the Holocaust" exhibit series.
Library Center
The Library Center is the headquarters of the Springfield-Greene County Library District. The 82,000-square-foot building houses major collections of print and electronic resources. These include special collections such as business and local history and genealogy; public Wi-Fi computers, four private study rooms, five small conference rooms, a kitchen and state-of-the-art reference technology. In addition, the Library Center includes other amenities characteristic of larger urban libraries. Those features include a 150-seat auditorium, a glass-enclosed reading room and art gallery, a story hour room, outdoor patio and outdoor story garden and the Between Friends Gift Shop.