
Moving Memories: Representing the Holocaust and Survivor Stories Through Dance
Dr. Rebecca Rossen. Courtesy: Ballet Austin
How can the Holocaust be represented through dance? How can dance move memory, transmit history, and generate dialogue about bigotry and social justice?
The “Moving Memories: Representing the Holocaust and Survivor Stories Through Dance” event places dance historian Dr. Rebecca Rossen in dialogue with Stephen Mills, Ballet Austin’s Sarah & Ernest Butler Family Fund Artistic Director, whose critically-acclaimed ballet, “Light: The Holocaust and Humanity Project,” will be restaged March 31–April 2 at the Long Center. Dr. Rossen will begin the session by discussing what she terms “testimony dance,” dance performances based on the oral histories of Holocaust survivors that archive survivor stories while situating audience members as witnesses, challenging viewers to not be complacent if we truly mean “never again.”
This richly illustrated presentation will focus on three significant testimony dances: Ballet Austin’s Light, based on the life of Houston philanthropist Naomi Warren (1920–2016), a Polish Jew who survived Auschwitz- Birkenau, Ravensbrück, and Bergen-Belsen; Bill T. Jones’s Analogy: Dora/Tramontane, set to an oral history that Jones conducted with Dora Werzberg Amelan (1920–2020), a French Jew who worked for the resistance; and Reka Szabo’s Sea Lavender and the Euphoria of Being (2016), a moving duet for a young dancer and 90-year old Eva Fahidi (b. 1925), a Hungarian-Jewish survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau and Allendorf (Buchenwald). The session will conclude with a discussion between Rossen and Mills about the process of making the ballet and its impact.
Rebecca Rossen is Associate Professor and Head of the Performance as Public Practice Program in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of Texas at Austin. In 2015, she was honored with a Regents’ Outstanding Teaching Award. She is the author of Dancing Jewish: Jewish Identity in American Modern and Postmodern Dance (Oxford University Press, 2014), winner of the Oscar G. Brockett Prize for excellence in dance research. Her new book examines representations of the Holocaust, memory, and transgenerational trauma in contemporary dance. This research is supported by a 2023-24 National Endowment of the Humanities Fellowship and a Rapoport Fellowship from the Schusterman Center in Jewish Studies.
The event will be held on March 7 at 7:15 p.m. on the Dell Jewish Community Campus. For more information, visit balletaustin.org/stephen-mills/light-the-holocaust-humanity-project/
Latest Posts
A Jewish Veteran’sPerspective: Observing Faith in Uniform
Jewish services held on Saipan in front of an Army Air Corps B-29 bomber shortly after Japan surrendered the Island in mid-1944.The service was conducted by (L to R) Chaplain Lt. Max Daina, Syracuse, NY, Sgt. Edward Slutsky, of New Haven, Conn., who acted as cantor,...
Austinite Returns to Hometown to Pursue Passion for JewishCommunity Building
Ellie Cohen speaks at the Jewish Federation’s National Cabinet Leadership Retreat in 2024 about her experience as a Jewish college student. Credit: Orly Feldman Ellie Cohen, a 2025 graduate of UCLA, spent her college years deeply engaged in understanding how Jewish...
One Big Happy Family Screens at the Dell JCC
David Finkle and Lisa Brenner during the audience Q&A at the AJFF screening of “One Big Happy Family” at the Dell Jewish Community Center. Credit: Cynthia Winer By Allison Teegardin On Sunday, July 6, approximately 60 people attended the Dell Jewish Community...
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Fitness
Swimming
Tennis & Pickleball
Sports
EDUCATION
Jewish Culture & Education
Early Childhood Program Preschool
After School & Childcare
Camps
ARTS & CULTURE
Literary Arts
Visual Arts
Theatre & Film
Dance
COUNSELING & SUPPORT
Jewish Family Service
Counseling & Groups
Case Management
References & Resources
Disability & Inclusion
Copyright Shalom Austin 2025. Privacy Policy.
