I am pleased to announce and invite all to attend the study day, Greeks and Jews during World War II, on April 14, 2015 from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. in the Beck Rooms at Seton Hall University’s Walsh Library.
Through film, theatre exercises, stories and portions of their moral courage workshops, Isaac Dostis and Diana Sunrise Dostis will offer three sessions, which include “The Holocaust in Greece,” “The Righteous of All Nations” and “How We Might Prevent Another Holocaust.”
Isaac Dostis is a writer and film maker with a special focus on the tragic era of the Shoah (Holocaust) in Greece, and Diana Dostis is an award winning actress and member of the Actors Studio in New York City. Isaac and Diana are co-authors of three books: Ten Gold Medals: Glory or Freedom (2014), Greek Salad (2014), and Ioannina, My Ioannina (2015). They are also co-recipients of the Raoul Wallenberg Award and the Axelrod Award for Holocaust Educators, sponsored by New Jersey State Department of Education’s Commission on Holocaust Education. You can learn more about the Dostis’ films, books, workshops and plays, which have been presented in the United States, Canada, Israel and Albania, by visiting www.act1presentations.com.
All who are interested in attending the study day can access the event’s flyer and schedule here for more information. This program is free and open to the public, including lunch, but you must register. Please reply by contacting me at (973) 761-9751 or Lawrence.Frizzell@shu.edu no later than April 10, 2015. If you are an educator, please provide the name of your school when registering.
The study day will offer five professional development credit hours for educators and is sponsored by the Jewish-Christian Studies Graduate Program with financial assistance from the Msgr. John M. Oesterreicher Endowment.
I hope to see you on April 14th!



People of every spiritual tradition should explore the heritage of their faith with regard to the human interaction with planet Earth. The accusation that the Genesis Creation narrative is responsible for depredation of the earth is false. The Bible is theocentric; the idea that “Man is the measure of all things” comes from another source; it has been taken up by some who delighted in the name of Christian, while exploiting and pillaging our natural resources. Rethinking priorities is at the beginning of a balanced understanding of the human vocation.


We pray for all who suffer persecution for their faith.





