Yom HaShoah Commemoration Featuring Hebrew University Digital Preservationist Renana Keydar and IKAR Rabbi Sharon Brous in Los Angeles

More than 100 Los Angeles community members attended a moving and informative Yom HaShoah event focused on preserving the personal narratives of mass atrocities, such as the Holocaust and the Oct. 7 attacks.

Presented by the Western Region of American Friends of the Hebrew University at Fox Studios, the featured speakers were Los Angeles IKAR Rabbi Sharon Brous and Hebrew University of Jerusalem Prof. Renana Keydar, who serves as the Academic Director of the Center for Digital Humanities and heads the Alfred Landecker Lab for the Computational Analysis of Holocaust Testimonies.

“Yom HaShoah has taken on an ever more meaningful importance as Oct. 7 has become a tragic reminder of the atrocities that the Jewish people have faced throughout history,” says Patricia Glaser, AFHU’s Western Region Vice Chair, who also serves on the Hebrew University Board of Governors. “I am so proud to support the Hebrew University, which is involved in a vital effort to record these Oct. 7 testimonies to share with the world.”

Hebrew University has become a central repository of digital information on mass atrocities in collaboration with Edut 710, a grassroots organization with 400 volunteers led by Keydar, that is documenting and analyzing survivors’ accounts of the attacks.

The scale of the massacre, coupled with attempts to deny its occurrence and severity, underscores the urgent need for real-time preservation of testimony. The Edut 710 Digital Archive combines traditional archival methods with cutting-edge technologies like AI, blockchain, computational text analysis, and natural language processing, ensuring the authenticity, integrity, and accessibility of thousands of audiovisual testimonies.

“By preserving these vital testimonies, the Edut 710 Digital Archive ensures that the lessons of the Holocaust and October 7 are never forgotten,” Keydar says. “We are committed to building a digital archive that will sustain all these testimonies, that will allow global access for many different uses, including education, academic research, legal, and historical, using the latest technological innovations.”

Rabbi Sharon Brous, a founder of IKAR, a leading-edge Jewish community based in Los Angeles, delivered words of inspiration and insight to the attendees throughout the evening.