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Holocaust Community Services

Providing Holistic Support to Chicagoland Survivors Since 1999

Program Overview

Services and Support

A program of CJE SeniorLife and the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago, Holocaust Community Services (HCS) supports approximately 1,700 local Holocaust Survivors to live independently and with dignity for as long as possible. Survivors range in age from 79-103, and more than 90% are immigrants from the former Soviet Union. For Survivors, the consequences of advanced aging are compounded by the physical and emotional horrors they endured during the Holocaust, and HCS is here to walk beside them as they navigate this stage of life.

The number of Holocaust Survivors requiring community support has steadily increased as the population ages; over the past ten years, the number of Survivors served by HCS has increased tenfold. Though the overall population is declining, the level of support Survivors require continues to grow.

HCS provides a full-range of resources and support to survivors and their families:

  • Comprehensive assessment to determine need and eligibility for ongoing financial assistance for food, medication, and homecare
  • Financial support for one-time and/or emergency needs
  • Transportation assistance
  • Support groups
  • Wellness classes
  • Events and socialization opportunities
  • Restitution and reparations assistance

HCS also provides training to professionals and community members who work with Survivors and their families, and is actively engaged with other local, national, and international partners who teach awareness and advocacy around the growing needs of aging Survivors.

The program is supported by social welfare grants from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany Inc., KAVOD SHEF, and other generous foundations and donors. About 75% of the total funding is allocated from the Claims Conference, which supports organizations serving Jewish Holocaust survivors around the world, providing for in-home caregiving, food assistance, medical care, and transportation. A recent demographic report published by the Claims Conference revealed that approximately 245,000 Holocaust survivors are still living across 90 countries.

For more information on Holocaust Community Services at CJE, please call 773.508.1004

NEVER HEARD—NEVER FORGET

Stories of Victims & Survivors of the Holocaust in the former Soviet Union

Memory is a precious human gift and a significant Jewish value, but unless memories are recorded they will be forgotten. Since its inception, the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center has been engaged in recording oral histories of Holocaust survivors. Survivors’ memories of that genocide are indelibly planted in their minds and are evoked through thoughtful, probing, nonjudgmental questioning, and active and sympathetic listening. Each survivor’s oral history enriches and supports the historical record by adding a crucial component to the collective memory of the Shoah.

Survivor testimonies help to counter Holocaust denial—the effort to murder the victims a second time by obliterating the truth of their experiences. We must also still contend with those who minimize, distort, and downplay the Holocaust. Firsthand survivor accounts aid in dispelling such disinformation and misinformation. They also become an important aspect of family history. They provide vivid testimonials as to family roots and histories, and can lead to intergenerational discussion and genealogical exploration.*

Never Heard–Never Forget Volume I & Volume II commemorate victims and survivors of the Holocaust in Nazi-occupied territories of the former Soviet Union (FSU). Volume II has over 135 newly published personal and family narratives of Chicago-area Holocaust survivors’ experiences, written in both English and Russian, with archival photos and documents. These compelling accounts were collected by volunteers, descendants of survivors, and CJE SeniorLife’s Holocaust Community Services.

New! Volume II (2022)

Volume I (2017)

Prices:

NHNF Volume I (2017)—$25 each
NHNF Volume II (2022)—$36 each
NHNF Volumes I & II bundle—$54

Proceeds from Volumes I and II of the book will go to the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center for exhibits and programs on the Soviet Holocaust story and to Holocaust Community Services at CJE SeniorLife for assistance to Holocaust survivors from the FSU and for ongoing efforts to document and preserve the history of the Soviet Holocaust experience.

For more information, please email NeverForgetBook@cje.net.


The Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center is thrilled to share the launch of the new online exhibition experience, The Holocaust in the Soviet Union, developed in partnership with Holocaust Community Services at CJE SeniorLife.

The site is a first-of-its-kind online experience, for the museum itself, and for sharing the little-known history of the Holocaust in the Soviet Union as told through the stories of Chicago-area survivors and their families. This new site includes an online exhibition; a research page with access to the museum’s full photo and object collection connected to the Holocaust in the Soviet Union; a stories page developed in partnership with Holocaust Community Services at CJE SeniorLife highlighting individual stories of Chicago-area survivors and rescuers; and a page dedicated to secondary classroom educator and student activities.

This project was a remarkable interdepartmental and community effort, and the result is a truly elegant and powerful online experience.

View this exhibition >>>

Look Inside the Book and Read a Sample Story | Выдержки Историй Второго Издания

We Can Help

Contact Us Today

Whether you’re not sure where to start or have specific questions for our team of professionals, please don’t hesitate to reach out. Call to talk with a team member immediately at 773.508.1000 or submit the contact form to the right and someone from CJE will be in touch shortly.