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Lucille Selig and Leo Frank at Grant Park in Atlanta, July 17, 1909. |
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The Breman Museum’s special exhibition Seeking Justice: The Leo Frank Case Revisited recounts the racially charged and tragic events surrounding the murder of Mary Phagan in 1913 and lynching of Leo Frank two years later.
Seeking Justice includes intimate interviews reflecting on the terrible chain of events surrounding these two unsolved murders that shook the nation, as well as documentary materials and artifacts recently made public.
Seeking Justice will make its national premiere in Atlanta on February 10, 2008, and remain on display through December 31, 2008, before traveling to other cities.
The Breman’s archival collections of materials relating to the Leo Frank case provide unparalleled documentation and artifacts for the exhibition, and original items will circulate with the traveling exhibition. Learn more
See a listing of programs and events taking place in conjunction with
Seeking Justice.
Download a Chronology & Who's Who relating to
the
Leo Frank case. (Includes images from the exhibition!)
Exhibition Catalogue,
Seeking Justice: The Leo Frank Case Revisited
now available in The Breman Museum Shop
and on line.
$22.00
The catalogue features an
introduction by
Eli N. Evans; "A Model of the New South,"
by Andy Ambrose; "Lynching," by Clifford Kuhn; "The Press & the Frank Case by Steve Oney; "Screening a Lynching: The Leo Frank Case on Film & TV,"
by Dr. Matthew H. Bernstein; "The Frank Case & the Law," by Leonard Dinnerstein;
and images and text from the exhibition by
Sandra Berman & Jane Leavey.
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The Breman's fabulous cookbook Seasoned With Love: |
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Catalogues from The Breman's special exhibition, ZAP! POW! BAM! The Superhero:
The Golden Age of Comic Books, 1938—1950, are still available. Get yours today!
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The Winter 2008 edition of The Breman Community newsletter is available for downloading by clicking here. This edition features a front-page article on Seeking Justice: The Leo Frank Case Revisited (no surprise there); a Cuba Archives travelogue article about our recent trip to Sylacauga, Alabama (hometown of Jim Nabors - who knew?) to learn about the Goldberg/Salloway family and businesses; an article about The Breman library's extensive video collection - a terrific resource for teachers of the Holocaust and social justice; and several articles relating to the Weinberg Center for Holocaust Education.
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Have you missed a lecture or book talk at The Breman? Several Breman events are now available through the Atlanta Forum Network website:
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Art of a Holocaust Survivor Helga Weissova-Hoskova, artist, Holocaust survivor Holocaust survivors Helga Weissova-Hoskova and Ilse Reiner reunite to tell the stories of survival in words and art. |
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Jews of the Confederacy Lunelle Siegel, United Daughters of the Confederacy Lunelle Siegel, an experienced Confederate soldier researcher, discusses, step by step, the process of uncovering relatives involved in the Civil War. |
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Eye of the Needle: Holocaust Remembrance Bernice Steinhardt, co-founder, Art and Remembrance Helene McQuade, co-founder, Art and Remembrance Holocaust survivor Esther Nisenthal Krinitz's two daughters discuss their efforts to get their mother's story out into the world. |
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Home Is Where You Find It Benjamin Hirsch, writer, architect, Holocaust survivor Benjamin Hirsch describes his escape, with his four brothers and sisters, from the horrors of Nazism to a new life in America. |
Thank-you to The Breman's wonderful Partners!
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The Breman website is supported by a generous gift from the
Jerry and Dulcy Rosenberg Family
in honor of Elinor Rosenberg Breman
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