Courageous Conversations - Stereotypes
Mar
30

Courageous Conversations - Stereotypes

Whether it’s handling conflict, confronting a friend, expressing an unpopular idea, or trying to have a conversation whose opinions and values differ from our own, we all encounter challenging conversations.

Our Courageous Conversations series will help you approach those situations in a new and thoughtful way.  Over dinner, people of different backgrounds and disparate viewpoints will gather to explore challenging topics in a safe, respectful environment.

View Event →
Trans 101: Ask Me Anything with Dr. Eric Plemons
Apr
10

Trans 101: Ask Me Anything with Dr. Eric Plemons

This interactive conversation will be driven by audience questions. If you'd like to better understand the issues facing trans people today but don't know where to start, this is the event for you! Ask anything—from the most basic to philosophically complex. Advocacy begins with education. Let's talk!

View Event →

The Hineni Lectures - A Conversation with Humane Borders
Mar
20

The Hineni Lectures - A Conversation with Humane Borders

Humane Borders, a local nonprofit, works to mitigate the border crisis by maintaining a system of water stations on the routes used by migrants making the perilous journey to the United States on foot.

Join us for a conversation with Laurie Cantillo, executive director, and Steve Saltonstall, board member and volunteer, to learn more about what this humanitarian crisis looks like on the ground.

View Event →
Purim Pioneer Ball
Mar
8

Purim Pioneer Ball

The Purim Pioneer Ball is a community celebration that builds on the tradition and insight of the Hebrew Ladies Benevolent Society who started the first Purim event in Tucson. Those events helped raise funds for the building of the first synagogue in the Arizona Territory that became the current home for the Tucson Jewish Museum & Holocaust Center.

In addition to that tradition, TJMHC presents the Queen Esther Award for the individual who works to make our community stronger and safer. The 2025 honoree is Hedy Feuer!

View Event →
Courageous Conversations
Feb
25

Courageous Conversations

Whether it’s handling conflict, confronting a friend, expressing an unpopular idea, or trying to have a conversation whose opinions and values differ from our own, we all encounter challenging conversations.

 

Our Courageous Conversations series will help you approach those situations in a new and thoughtful way.  Over dinner, people of different backgrounds and disparate viewpoints will gather to explore challenging topics in a safe, respectful environment.

The programs will feature a catered meal, followed by meaningful, small-group discussions around an assigned topic (e.g. “stereotypes,” “identity,” “discrimination,” “gender dynamics,” “culture”). Guests will be seated with people they don’t (yet) know, and each table will have a facilitator to help ensure respectful, open dialogue and engaged listening.

 

Register today! The event is free but reservations are required.

View Event →
Personal Intimacies, Jewish Perspectives
Jan
29

Personal Intimacies, Jewish Perspectives

Individual rights and freedoms around personal relationships – including sexuality, gender identity, reproductive freedom and the human and civil rights of the LGBTQ+ (Lesbian/Gay/Bi-sexual/Transgender/Questioning) community – can be controversial. They are legislated in Congress and state houses and argued about over dinner tables across the country.

 Over the centuries, Judaism has addressed these matters frankly and openly and continues to do so under the rabbinic heading of Hilkhot Ishut, Laws of Personal Status.

 Join us for an evening with Rabbi Sandy Seltzer as he discusses how Judaism deals with these issues past and present.

View Event →
Jenn Budd in conversation with Mo Goldman
Nov
18

Jenn Budd in conversation with Mo Goldman

Jenn Budd was a Senior Patrol Agent with the US Border Patrol in San Diego, a Senior Intelligence Agent at San Diego Sector Headquarters and an Acting Supervisory Border Patrol Agent from 1995 to 2001 when she resigned in protest due to the rampant corruption and brutality she witnessed daily. After nearly 30 years of border experience on both sides of the issues, she came to the realization that our immigration policies have created an intentionally brutal system that, in her opinion, create an impossible, untenable process for asylum seekers.

View Event →
Get Out the Vote with Keshet
Sep
29

Get Out the Vote with Keshet

Join us to write postcards urging others to vote! We'll have everything you need - pens, postcards, stamps - to encourage other voters to get to the polls. Bring your friends, enjoy refreshments, and stay as long as you like. All are welcome. Please

R.S.V.P.

so we have enough bagels!

View Event →
The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman
Jun
28

The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman

The Amazing Life of Margot Heuman is a play about one of Southern Arizona’s local survivors and the first lesbian Holocaust survivor to bear testimony. Margot Heuman (1928-2022) was a survivor of Theresienstadt ghetto, Auschwitz, Neuengamme, and Bergen-Belsen.

View Event →
TJMHC 2024 Teacher’s Conference!
Jun
17
to Jun 18

TJMHC 2024 Teacher’s Conference!

Sign-ups are now open for our Educator's Conference this summer. Join us for a 2-day seminar on implementing Holocaust education guidelines. We'll include new topics, pedagogical tools, and an overview of how the museum can support you! Continuing ed. credits, breakfast/lunch, and limited lodging funds available!

View Event →
Is There A Chosen People? Conflicting Claims of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
May
29

Is There A Chosen People? Conflicting Claims of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam

Over the centuries Judaism, Christianity and Islam have each described

themselves as the children of Abraham and as such special and chosen.

It is a claim that has often resulted in the degradation of the other

rather than as a relationship of respect and honor.

In the schedule that follows, we will examine how each faith

community identifying as chosen, understood the meaning and

obligations of that belief as well as the consequences derived from its

denial of that legacy to anyone else.

View Event →
2900 Miles and Other Jumping Cholla
May
23

2900 Miles and Other Jumping Cholla

Serge J-F. Levy was born and lived in New York City for 39 years before moving to the Sonoran Desert. He will be presenting a selection of street, documentary and landscape photography from his 30 year career alongside his writing reflecting on his experience as a Jew in America. Q + A to follow.

View Event →
Are Jews The Chosen People? Reconciling Chosenness With The Holocaust.
May
8

Are Jews The Chosen People? Reconciling Chosenness With The Holocaust.

Over the centuries Judaism, Christianity and Islam have each described

themselves as the children of Abraham and as such special and chosen.

It is a claim that has often resulted in the degradation of the other

rather than as a relationship of respect and honor.

In the schedule that follows, we will examine how each faith

community identifying as chosen, understood the meaning and

obligations of that belief as well as the consequences derived from its

denial of that legacy to anyone else.

View Event →
Never Again: Germans and Genocide After the Holocaust, a talk with Dr. Andrew Port
Apr
18

Never Again: Germans and Genocide After the Holocaust, a talk with Dr. Andrew Port

When it comes to German efforts to confront the Nazi past, conventional approaches tend to focus on solemn statements and well-meant monuments.

Never Again: Germans and Genocide after the Holocaust (Belknap/Harvard, 2023) looks instead at the very concrete ways in which postwar Germans embraced the lessons of the Third Reich and the Holocaust—above all in response to other genocides that took place elsewhere after 1945 in places like Cambodia, Bosnia, and Rwanda. This innovative approach makes the lessons, limits, and liabilities of politics driven by memories of a troubled history harrowingly clear.

View Event →
Behind the Panels: Adapting a Holocaust-era Opera into a Graphic Novel                                                                                                        A Talk with Dave Maass
Apr
11

Behind the Panels: Adapting a Holocaust-era Opera into a Graphic Novel A Talk with Dave Maass

Death Strikes: The Emperor of Atlantis is a new, critically acclaimed graphic novel adaptation of Der Kaiser von Atlantis, a satirical sci-fi opera written in 1943 by two Jewish creators while they were imprisoned in Terezín (Theresienstadt) concentration camp. Writer Dave Maass visits the Tucson Jewish Museum with a visual presentation that covers the research that went into adapting the book for Dark Horse Comics, the secret symbolism and references embedded in the artwork, and how the book came together under the guidance of legendary comics editor Karen Berger (The Sandman).

View Event →
TJMHC Purim Masquerade Ball!
Mar
23

TJMHC Purim Masquerade Ball!

TJMHC is excited to reimagine Southern Arizona’s original Purim Ball!

In the early 1900s, the Hebrew Ladies Benevolent Society held a Purim Ball to raise funds to build the first synagogue in the Arizona Territory. Built in 1910, this space is now home to the Tucson Jewish Museum & Holocaust Center. Make plans now to join us as we celebrate their original vision and determination in creating a heart for Southern Arizona Jewish Life.

View Event →