photo: prison courtyard, Robben Island, South Africa

Erica Lehrer
Director

I am an assistant professor in the departments of History and Sociology/Anthropology, and hold the Canada Research Chair in Post-Conflict Memory, Ethnography and Museology.
I established CEREV to create a community of researchers and curators and produce new knowledge around issues of culture and identity in the aftermath of violence.

My interests relate to the meanings of suffering to victims, perpetrators and bystanders, how these meanings are attached to material things and landscapes, how they define and foster group boundaries, identification and affiliation, and how they influence people's future relations and actions. My work thus far has focused on post-Holocaust Jewish culture; heritage, museums, and tourism; ethnography; intercultural dialogue; and public scholarship.

The book manuscript I am currently completing is titled Remaking Memory: How Jews and Poles are Salvaging Jewish Heritage in Poland (and reconceiving national belonging along the way). It is an ethnography that explores the intersection of Polish and Jewish "memory projects" and the personal quests and encounters that inform them as they meet in the historical Jewish neighbourhood of Krakow, Poland.

I am also engaged in a variety of experiments exploring the use of alternative media and venues for disseminating the fruits of academic research.


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David Ward
Assistant Director for Facilities, Technology and Training

I am a photographer and writer with 30 years of international experience, mostly in Africa, where I have worked with educational and fundraising projects for North American and European NGOs. My educational background includes a BFA in design and photography and graduate work in Communications.
Areas of expertise include poverty, social justice, health, environment and a variety of cross cultural issues. In addition to my involvement with the CURA Life Stories of Montrealers Displaced by War, Genocide and Other Human Rights Violations project, I am developing two other major projects: an examination of conditions in Ethiopia 25 years after the 1984-85 famine, and a photographic exploration of relationships between the worldwide diaspora of the Romani people, formerly known as "Gypsies," and majority societies.

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