Jewish Museum Berlin hosts student workshops – June 10, 2025
The graphic novel being written by Gilad Seliktar about the survival of Klaus Zwilsky in the Jewish Hospital Berlin during the Second World War is nearing completion and is scheduled for publication in 2026 or early 2027. In conjunction with the SCVN project, Aubrey Pomerance, Head of Archives at the Jewish Museum Berlin, where the Zwilsky family collection is held, and Charlotte Schallié, Project Lead and Co-Director of the Survivor-Centred Visual Narratives Project, conducted two workshops with university students in the museum’s Academy Building on June 10, 2025.

Aubrey Pomerance presenting various archival materials from the Zwilsky Collection. (Photo credit: Charlotte Schallié.)
The first group came from the Center for Research on Antisemitism at the Technical University of Berlin, the students taking part in a seminar entitled “Emotions and Holocaust Studies.” Alongside a presentation of original materials from the Zwilsky Collection which provided a broad overview of the family’s life in Berlin and their survival at the Jewish Hospital, the students were shown documents and photographs pertaining to Edgar Lax, who in February 1939 at the age of 15 went with a Kindertransport from Berlin to the Netherlands and two months later on a further Kindertransport to England. A third presentation focused on ego documents from various collections from which a wide range of emotional expressions can be gleaned.
The second group of students came from the Free University of Berlin, where they were taking part in the seminar “Linien der Unterdrückung: Graphic Novels erzählen Geschichte” (Lines of Oppression: Graphic Novels Relate History). With this group, the focus was exclusively on the archival collection of the Zwilsky family. Following the presentation of the various archival materials by Aubrey and colleagues from the archives to both groups, Charlotte elucidated the Survivor-Centred Visual Narratives Project and her previous work with graphic novels, and presented numerous examples from Gilad’s work on the Zwilsky story. The presentations were followed by a lively discussion with the students.
Students shared the following reflections about the workshops:
“The workshop with Charlotte Schallié and Aubrey Pomerance was interesting and very informative. I would like to thank them for that. We were presented with an impressive and diverse collection of sources. The focus on family history and the use of first-person documents put the scale of the Holocaust into a perspective that is often lost in view of the magnitude of the event.”
“I have always seen graphic novels merely as a didactic opportunity […] However, it only became clear to me through the workshop that graphic novels are very well suited to adequately taking into account the complexity of memory processes that the Holocaust qua essence entails. And also the production [artistic creation] process, which requires an intensive [focus and] care but above all subjective attention and, in a way, tenderness.”
Thank you to Aubrey Pomerance, and our project partner the Jewish Museum Berlin, for hosting the archival student workshops this summer. We appreciate having in-person workshops for students to engage with the Zwilsky collection, learn about archiving, and gather insights into the process of creating an SCVN graphic novel.
Learn more about Klaus and Gilad’s collaboration here.