Open Minds. Open Hearts.

Teaching the Holocaust, Israel and Jewish History.

Study Travel Seminars  •  Professional Development  •  In-school Programs  •  Continuing Education  •  Virtual Events

Opening minds and hearts through learning experiences that transform education and empower educators and students to combat antisemitism and other bigotries.

Our participants come from...

Educator Impact

Student Impact

0
Countries
0
US States

Educator Impact

0+
Educators

Student Impact

~0
Students

Seminars

Study seminars that treat destinations as a textbook to learn history

Subscribe to our bi-weekly newsletter of community programs.

Events

Community programs, film discussions, travel meetings, and more

From Slavery to Freedom Film Series: “American Dignity”

Wednesday, June 17 @ 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm EDT
Heinz History Center
1212 Smallman Street | Pittsburgh

Go to Event

Gatekeeping America: Immigration Policy & the Limits of Refuge

Thursday, October 1 @ 8:30 am - 2:30 pm EDT
Allegheny Intermediate Unit
475 E Waterfront Drive | Homestead

Go to Event

CWB Promotional Videos

EDUCATORS! Subscribe to our monthly educator's edition.

Curriculum Center

Online educational resources for educators and students

Lesson Plans

Lesson Plans

Effective lesson plans and curricula for teaching students about the Holocaust, genocide, hate, cultural differences, and more.

Resources

Resources

Our curated collection of valuable resources from around the web, covering the Holocaust, genocide, hate, and cultural and racial tolerance.

Subscribe to our bi-weekly newsletter of community programs.

Blog

Explore the sites and experiences of our Travel Study Seminars through the eyes of the participants

Observance and observations: Seminar spotlights Vilnius

Once the “Jerusalem of Lithuania,” Vilnius lost nearly all its 80,000 Jews in the Holocaust. Now home to about 2,000, it struggles to sustain Jewish life, yet preserves its rich…

Read More

Beauty, Vigor and Curiosity in Helsinki’s Jewish Community – By Adam Reinherz

How do so few people make such a sound? The Helsinki Jewish community totals less than a1,000 yet its presence is palpable. As we discovered, the Jewish school, which serves…

Read More

Day 9: Seeds of a Jewish Garden – By Adam Reinherz

In the smallest of communities we saw life. At their synagogue, in their JCC and across theircity, Tallinners are creating a Jewish future. This pursuit, which Estonians exhibited, is evidencethat…

Read More

There is an ineffable quality to being in a space that strikes nerves; this program takes those difficult experiences and funnels them toward enthusiastic and effective teaching.

Adam Oberlin  •  teacher

For me, learning about the Holocaust and seeing the Holocaust sites are two different concepts. In some regard, learning and reading allows you to have a sense of self-fulfillment that you understand what you read, but when you visually encounter these atrocities, this all changes…I expected to only learn, but we did so much more. We commemorated, we remembered, and we celebrated the lives of those who perished in the Holocaust. We prayed, we broke bread with total strangers, and by the end, it was a truly close-knit community.

Blake Humphrey  •  student
Scroll to Top