Week-long Tullie House display
(Date of issue: Monday, 17 January 2011)
To coincide with Holocaust Memorial Day (27 January), a
thought-provoking display will go on show at Tullie House from this
Friday (21 January).
Produced by Carlisle City Council and Cumbria Constabulary, it
is free to view and will be available to see in Tullie House Museum
and Art Gallery’s atrium between Friday, 21 and Friday, 28 January.
It has been funded by a MLA Renaissance in the Regions grant, with
support from Tullie House’s Learning Support team.
It shows a timeline of events, starting at the Holocaust through
to modern-day hate crimes. Information supplied by the Imperial War
Museum, as well as contributions from Holocaust survivors,
including Arek Hersh, are included. Cllr Jacquelyne Geddes,
Portfolio holder for Community Engagement, said:
“Holocaust Memorial Day is about remembering the victims and
those whose lives have been changed beyond recognition because of
the Holocaust, Nazi persecution and subsequent genocides in
Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and the ongoing atrocities today in
Darfur. It provides us with an opportunity to honour the survivors
but it’s also a chance to look to our own lives and communities
today.”
A section attributed to Craig Mackey QPM, Chief Constable,
Cumbria Constabulary setting out how the Police are supporting
communities and building a safer and stronger Cumbria, also forms
part of the display. He says: “A hate crime occurs when a criminal
offence is committed against someone because of their religion,
gender or gender identify, race, ethnicity, religion, disability or
sexual orientation. These crimes affect not only the primary victim
but also the wider family and sometimes communities. In Cumbria, we
simply will not tolerate hate crime and have a range of measures in
place that help us protect people from harm and to prevent crime
and antisocial behaviour.”
Following its display at Tullie House, it will then be used by
Cumbria Constabulary at their school talks. It will also be
available to use by community groups, as a means of raising the
issue of hate crime and the steps taken to stamp it out. To book
out the display, free of charge, contact Julie Dodd, Diversity
Officer, Cumbria Constabulary by emailing julie.dodd@cumbria.pnn.police.uk
or calling 0845 33 00 247.