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The Kreisau conference for memorial sites targets museums and memorials throughout Europe and worldwide. Its main goal is to provide a platform for experts and opinion makers in this field to exchange ideas, foster networking among facilities and institutions, with the aim of promoting stronger collaboration and encouraging critical-reflexive thinking about democratic memorial culture.

This year the conference focuses on the debates surrounding the creation of monuments. How do these monuments express experiences of dictatorship, and to what extent do they differentiate between National Socialism and Communism or remember them collectively? Furthermore, what changes occurred after the turning points in 1945 or 1989? How do memorials dedicated to victims of violence evolve over time, and what is the role of victim competition in this evolution? What is the significance of addressing crime complexes and Transitional Justice in the creation of memorial sites? What trends are evident in monuments dedicated to real or perceived heroes? How does gender history feature in memorials, both past and present? How does the formal language of memorials change over time? Lastly, the conference explores how memorials and places of remembrance contribute to the development of democratic memorial culture.

On Friday, November 24, 2023, at 2:43 pm, an exciting journey will begin at Berlin-Lichtenberg station! Krzyzowa will be the guest of the Train to Culture.

We like the idea of a Polish-German cultural train, which is now in its eighth year connecting Berlin and Krzyzowa, and the program's design gives us the opportunity to introduce Krzyzowa and all that it entails, as well as to point out that Krzyzowa can be easily reached by train.

The excursion program will be organized by the staff of our Foundation, the Kreisau-Initiative and the Freya von Moltke Foundation, and there will be, among other things, live music performed by the Smooth Acoustic Duo and a quiz that will provide all passengers with the opportunity to gain knowledge and win prizes.

The House on the Hill is the heart of the Krzyżowa remembrance and education work. The members of the Kreisau Circle met in the former home of Helmuth James and Freya von Moltke during the Second World War.The building was completely renovated in the '90s and ceremonially opened as a memorial and residential building in 1998. Over the past decade or so, the technical condition of the building has deteriorated significantly due to humidity and under the influence of weather conditions.Therefore, in 2022, a technical dossier was started, which will form the basis, planned for the following years, for the renovation of our memorial.

External construction work will begin later in 2023. The foundations will be drained and insulated, and the roof and elevation renovated. Therefore, guests visiting the Krzyżowa Foundation must expect restricted access to the House on the Hill from July onwards. Work on the interior will continue in the coming years. In addition, renovation and modernisation of the educational area and revitalisation of the garden are planned.

The big challenge for Krzyżowa now is to secure the necessary funding. The Willy Robert Pitzer Foundation, the Dr. Rolf M. Schwiete Foundation and the Georg Zinner Foundation have already pledged the initial funding, while funds are still lacking to complete all the necessary construction and renovation work and the new exhibition and educational space.

The East-West European Memorial Meeting in Krzyżowa/Kreisau is aimed at employees of memorial sites, museums, memorials, educational centers, human rights organizations or contemporary witness projects. The aim of the memorial meeting is to get to know each other and to exchange knowledge and experience. From 29 March to 1 April 2023, it took place for the 20th time in Kreisau.

You can download a detailed conference report as a pdf on this page.

20 Memorial Seminar Krzyzowa 2023.pdf

This year's meeting focused on insurrection, protest and resistance - debates in Eastern and Western Europe in the post-war and post-communist period and the remembrance of these in museums and memorial sites. Among the lecturers were Dr. habil. Magdalena Saryusz-Wolska (German Historical Institute Warsaw),  Prof. Dr. Claudia Weber (European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder)),  Prof. em. Dr. Peter Steinbach (German Resistance Memorial Centre, Berlin), Dr. Raphael Utz (German Historical Museum, Berlin), Dr. Martyna Gradzka-Rejak (Biuro Badań Historycznych IPN and Muzeum Getta Warszawskiego, Warsaw), Irmgard Zündorf (Leibniz Centre for Contemporary History Research, Potsdam),  Nataliia Ivchyk (NGO Mnemonic, Ukraine),  Vytautas Jurkus i Vytautas Petrikenas (9th Fort Kaunas, Lithuania) and Dr. Andrea Genest (Ravensbrück Memorial).

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