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Honors Students Continue Support of Stolpersteine Project Through Southern Miss Germany Study Abroad Program

Fri, 03/28/2025 - 09:51am | By: Dr. David Tisdale

Study Abroad

A study abroad program in Germany continues to offer University of 麻豆传媒色情片 (麻豆传媒色情片) honors students the opportunity to see how this consequential European nation celebrates its cultural riches and embraces a bright future while acknowledging a dark past.

The Honors 303 seminar, 鈥淯nderstanding Germany: Then and Now,鈥 explores the ways Germany presents itself to the world and how the world perceives Germany. In the two-week experiential learning trip, students learn about the country鈥檚 history and the thinkers, artists, trades, culture, and heritage to which many have never been exposed, followed by a look at the ways Germany has confronted the horrors of its role in the Holocaust and World War II, as well as the difficulties of the Cold War era.

Students visit Hamburg and surrounding towns, exploring the historic Hanseatic League, Hamburg鈥檚 world-renowned museums, Christmas markets, and literary figures before traveling to the capital, Berlin. There, they consider how Germany鈥檚 past intersects with its present and examine how the country has recognized and memorialized its history. Other sites that make up the program鈥檚 itinerary include the remains of the Berlin Wall and the communities, restaurants, and markets that make the city one of Europe鈥檚 most global and diverse. The itinerary also features day trips to L眉beck, the Baltic Sea, and Potsdam鈥搊ften referred to as the 鈥淰ersailles of Germany.鈥

This semester, the program and its students renewed their relationship with members of the parish of St. Nikolai church in Hamburg, who partner with the local Stolpersteine group. Stolpersteine, meaning 鈥渟tumbling stones,鈥 is the title of the commemorative brass plaques created by artist Gunter Demnig that memorialize victims of the Holocaust, which are placed throughout Germany and Europe. Southern Miss students have sponsored six Stolpersteine during the three study abroad group visits to Germany. 

This year, the Southern Miss Honors College sponsored Stolpersteine for two children of forced laborers from Eastern Europe who died in an infamous hospital in Hamburg.

Accompanying the students on the trip were Dr. Joyce Inman, dean of the Honors College; Dr. Sabine Heinhorst, dean emeritus; and Dr. Andrew Haley, associate professor of history.

鈥淚 consider one of the highlights of our stay in Hamburg our annual meeting with members of the St. Nikolai Church who are part of the Stolpersteine Initiative,鈥 Heinhorst said. 鈥淭he presentation by Herr Heinz-Otto Haag [on the project] helps our students understand the importance of remembering Nazi murder victims by name on a 鈥榮tumbling stone鈥 in front of their last known place of residence. Students feel particularly connected through our annual contribution, which funds two Stolpersteine.鈥

Honors College students Gracie Singley and Kaleb Favaloro reflected on the powerful impact of the Stolpersteine project and the importance of recognizing and remembering the inhumanity of the past to hopefully prevent it in the future not just in Germany, but throughout the world.鈥赌 

鈥淚t [Stolpersteine initiative] is so powerful because of how personal it makes the devastation of World War II,鈥 Singley said, noting that approximately 11 million people were murdered in the Holocaust in the 1930s-40s at the hands of the Nazi regime under dictator Adolf Hitler. 

鈥淚t forces you to confront the fact that each person was an individual who had a home, a family who loved them, and, above all else, dignity. It made me realize that instead of the Holocaust being one big tragedy, it was 11 million individual tragedies that the world will never be able to fully comprehend.鈥

For Favaloro, the Stolpersteine initiative could be replicated in the U.S. to memorialize victims of oppression and violence. 鈥淭hose helping in Germany do it because the victims were human just like us,鈥 Favaloro explained. 鈥淭hose who help the Jews don't have to be Jewish. To recognize the sins of our country's past, we don't have to be personally connected with the victim group鈥搘e just have to recognize our shared humanity." 

Dr. Joyce Inman, dean of the Honors College, said the Germany Study Abroad program aligns with a key goal of the college for its students鈥搇earning about other cultures and their place in our global community.

鈥淏eing a part of the team that brings this interdisciplinary and research-intensive opportunity to our Honors Scholars for the past three years has shaped me as a scholar, a teacher, and an administrator, and I鈥檓 grateful to my colleagues and our students for sharing their expertise and their curiosity with me,鈥 Inman reflected. 鈥淪outhern Miss students impress me more every year as they embrace the challenges of studying abroad and remind me that we are making a difference.鈥

For more information about the Southern Miss Honors College, visittheir website. Learn more about Southern Miss Study Abroad here.