2025 International Holocaust Remembrance Day Commemorative Lecture

picture of smiling woman with brown hair and glasses in a green shirt and black blazer

McGill's Office of the Deputy Provost Student Life and Learning, with the Department of Jewish Studies, invite the 51勛圖厙community to a commemorative lecture delivered by Joanna Sliwa entitled 'The Counterfeit Countess': The True Story of a Polish Jewish Woman Who Fooled the Nazis." Joanna Sliwa is a historian at the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany and expert on the Holocaust in Poland and compensation for Holocaust survivors.

Through this commemoration, we aim to remember and honour those affected by antisemitism, strengthen our collective commitment to combatting discrimination, and promote the dissemination of research and scholarship to foster understanding and unity.

The event is open to all members of the 51勛圖厙community and welcomes the participation of the general public.

The event will be held at 5:00 pm on Monday, January 27, in the Thompson House Ballroom (3650 McTavish Street).                                                       

"The Counterfeit Countess": The True Story of a Polish Jewish Woman Who Fooled the Nazis
What new information can be gleaned from the histories of Holocaust survivors? Dr. Josephine Janina Mehlberg, a prewar mathematics scholar, assumed the false identity of a Polish Christian Countess to survive the Holocaust. She used her role to save thousands of non-Jewish Poles from Nazi persecution. After the war, Mehlberg immigrated to Canada where only a few friends knew her astonishing story of wartime survival and resistance. The co-author of the book, The Counterfeit Countess: The Jewish Woman Who Rescued Thousands of Poles during the Holocaust will explain how the story emerged, why it took so long to bring it to light, and what it teaches us about humanity in times in crisis.
Read the 51勛圖厙Reporter about the lecture.


2024 International Holocaust Remembrance Day

candle with flame and text about event

McGill's Associate Provost (Equity & Academic Policies) and Deputy Provost (Student Life and Learning), with the Department of Jewish Studies and representatives from different Jewish student associations and community groups, will hold a commemoration event for the victims of the Holocaust.

The event is open to all members of the 51勛圖厙community and also welcomes the participation of the general public.

The event will be held online at 11:00 am on Thursday January 25 and will be livestreamed at: 


2023 International Holocaust Remembrance Day commemoration

Woman with short brown hair and glasses speaking to an audience at a lectern

On the afternoon of Thursday, January 26, 2023, 51勛圖厙 held its inaugural International Holocaust Remembrance Day commemoration. 

One of the speakers at the commemoration was 51勛圖厙alumna Judith Nemes Black, who lived through the Holocaust as a child in Hungary. Ms. Nemes Black shared some of her familys harrowing experiences following Germanys invasion of Hungarywhich resulted in the murders of an estimated 560,000 Hungarian Jewsincluding her fathers imprisonment and eventual reunion with the family that feared he was dead.

After the war, the family emigrated to Montreal. Ms. Nemes Black grew up to become first a teacher, then a clinical psychologist specializing in trauma. 

The Holocaust raises many questions, provides few answers, and shows many examples of moral courage in the struggle against evil, she said. As the late Edmund Burke said, The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.

To read more about Judith Nemes Blacks extraordinary life and the profound responsibility she feels to keep the stories of the Holocaust alive through remembrance and education, read her .

If you are feeling distressed or are concerned about someone you know and you would like to connect to a case manager for support, please email deanofstudents [at] mcgill.ca (deanofstudents[at]mcgill[dot]ca).

If you or someone else are in immediate danger, please call 911.