Common Reading talk on parallels in refugee debates of the 1930s and 2019

History faculty member Ray Sun and Honors student Zili Chang will present “Papers, Ships, and Tweets: American Policy toward European Jews in the 1930s and its Memory in Contemporary Battles of Refugees,” today at 5 p.m. in CUE 203.

Sun, an associate professor in the Department of History and a specialist in the history of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, will show the historical parallels and roots of current official attempts to restrict the number of refugees admitted to the United States by presenting an overview of the United States’ unwelcoming policy and hostile public opinion toward German and Austrian Jews seeking safe haven between 1933 and 1939.

Zili Chang, a senior History major, will present research from her Honors thesis that examines the current memory and political usage via social media of the infamous case of the passenger liner St. Louis, whose +900 Jewish refugees were not allowed to disembark in Cuba or the United States and were forced to return to Europe, where over 250 were eventually murdered in the Holocaust.

This talk is part of the 2019-20 Common Reading Series, which is hosting weekly events on topics related to this year’s Common Reading book, Refuge: Rethinking Refugee Policy in a Changing World.

For those unable to attend in person, the Global Campus will also be streaming the event live at https://youtu.be/OwG53tummAc or via registration at https://connections.wsu.edu/events-calendar/common-reading-series-papers-ships-and-tweets/

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