This article or section is in a state of significant expansion or restructuring. You are welcome to assist in its construction by editing it as well. If this article or section has not been edited in several days, please remove this template. If you are the editor who added this template and you are actively editing, please be sure to replace this template with {{in use}} during the active editing session. Click on the link for template parameters to use.
This page was last edited by 2601:589:4102:4A8F:28C9:92F4:3E51:F132 (talk | contribs) 24 days ago. (Update timer) |
This is actively undergoing a major edit for a short while. To help avoid edit conflicts, please do not edit this page while this message is displayed. This page was last edited at 19:12, 23 May 2024 (UTC) (24 days ago) – this estimate is cached, . Please remove this template if this page hasn't been edited for a significant time. If you are the editor who added this template, please be sure to remove it or replace it with {{Under construction}} between editing sessions. |
The Tsal Kaplun Foundation (est 2016) is an American not-for-profit organization named in honor of Tsal Kaplun. The organization’s stated mission is to preserve the Jewish culture, communities, and heritage in former Soviet republics.
History
edit[rewrite]
Shoah Atlas
editThe Shoah Atlas-Ukraine Project (2016-present)
Commenced in 2016, the Shoah Atlas aims to create profiles of individual Holocaust killing sites for all regions of Ukraine, present essential information about the Jewish communities in Ukraine destroyed during the Holocaust, and to feature maps equipped with an interactive timeline of the mass killings.
Shoah Atlas-Ukraine is meant to be an interactive educational, research, and reference tool that allows students and scholars alike to learn about the destruction of Jewish communities during the Holocaust. The Shoah Atlas seeks to document many unknown and less researched places in Ukraine, where some 1.5 million Jews were murdered by Nazis and local collaborators as part of the Holocaust.
The Shoah Atlas features profile pages for individual killing sites that present historical data about the Holocaust event at that site, including a summary, photos, and links to comprehensive sources; Jewish community history pages that provide links to information on the history of the local Jewish community, descriptions of Holocaust events in the local Jewish community, victims’ names, survivors’ memoirs, witness testimony, as well as documentary films; and overviews of Holocaust events in each Ukrainian region; a search engine that facilitates easy access to each killing site location, as well as the site’s profile pages.
As of March 2023, TKF completed research in fourteen Ukrainian regions, creating profile pages for some 1200 killing sites and 350 former Jewish communities as of February 2023. In the process, their researchers uncovered over 250 killing sites that had been missed by well-known published sources.