Sunday, January 18, 2009

How To Get A Free Letter Of Community Service

ANTONIO SORRENTI GdM 2009



Antonio Antonio Sorrenti Sorrenti (Novigrad, 1944) - here in the foreground, with a white beard - Triveneto is Chairman of the Research Center on the Holocaust.
now over 10 years with the Center dedicated to the research of the documents pertaining to the racial laws and their consequences. The research was concentrated in Triveneto and Calabria. The two territories have a link that is the transfer of internees from the camps in the Triveneto Ferramonti Tarsia near Cosenza, and vice versa.
After several years of patient and painstaking work, in April 2004 was inaugurated the exhibition "Shards 1938 -1945" visited only in the Veneto for more than 70,000 people. The exhibition brings together documents, images and testimonies of the concentration camps Veneto. Meanwhile, the research work has gone ahead with excellent results. Already in planning is a second exhibition, that will be the natural sequel to the previous year.
One of the pillars of research - and shows - is the need to make clear the difference between concentration camps "classic," provincial concentration camps and extermination camps. The first structures were surrounded by barbed wire, within which the internees were collected and kept under observation. The latter, at least in most cases, they were structures that were adapted to detention, such as hotels, opened in decentralized communities with respect to large roads. The third, finally, were the true "death factories."
The documents found and made available to schools are generally of the various documents as personal identity cards and documents autodenunce a more general concern that the restrictions of the internees were subject here, and behavior that were required to be given to the people and the territory
Triveneto The Centre for Studies on the Shoah has gathered documentation on more than 60 Provincial concentration camps, through which he also collected a record field of iron concentrate. In this work we have combined the discovery of the route of the convoy two left Rome October 18, 1943. The train in question thanks to the intervention of the Red Cross and Padua railway was opened, and the deportees were given food and water. A woman was helped to give birth and was subsequently taken a dead buried the cemetery of Padua. On 5 November 2003 with the participation of the Jewish Community of Rome, the City of Rome, those who did open the train, we reminded the station that the train 1024 people were deported to Auschwitz. Them if they returned to only 15 men and 1 woman.
A key part of the Centre's work is teaching in the schools, which consists of courses of varying degrees. The courses are managed by the same Sorrenti, are carried out as normal class hours and are based on original documents, that kids can see and touch. It was attended by dozens of schools, mostly in the Veneto, Calabria, Sicily and Basilicata.
to a clerical error the name of "Antonio Sorrenti" has appeared in the media at the beginning of Memorial Day at the University of Calabria
as "Antonio Santori." We apologize first and foremost concerned with the ( PC).

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