Memoria [EN] No. 7 / April 2018 | Page 27

project - Ambassadors of Oneg Shabbat - and invited a group of students from Penn Hillel in Philadelphia, who by participating in workshops and meetings with educators, learned about the history of the uprising and the contents of the Ghetto Archive. The task of the Ambassadors is to disseminate knowledge about the Oneg Shabbat at their home universities.

We want to organize a travelling exhibition that will tell people about the Oneg Shabbat and the contents of the Archive in selected museums across the world.

Ethical leadership

In March 2018, Emanuel Ringelblum and the Oneg Shabbat group were posthumously honored with the 2018 Awards for Ethical Leadership granted by the New York organization Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics (FASPE). The creators of the Warsaw Ghetto Underground Archive were honored for "courage and predictability. These ethically operating documentalists of the time risked their lives to provide reports that are accurate and irrefutable proof of the catastrophic events of their era”.

By disseminating knowledge of the Ringelblum Archive, we want to tell the story of the ethical leadership of the Oneg Shabbat members - the co-operation, opposition, courage and trust needed to act and work in the deepest secrecy.

The Ringelblum Archive is a great archive of many people, consisting of nearly 800 accounts, 88 literary works, 120 scientific studies, over 350 files of official documents and 55 titles of underground press published in the ghetto. The collection has more than 35,000 pages.

We know that a single scream is sometimes the loudest, and therefore, we want to publish selected documents so that readers may become acquainted with them all over the world.