Thursday May 17th 2012

Pages

Insider

Archives

Posts Tagged ‘human rights’

Marshall T. Meyers Digital Collection

Duke University Libraries announces the publication of the Marshall T. Meyer digital collection (available at http://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/meyermarshall/ ) which documents the human rights activism of the Rabbi Marshall T. Meyer in 1970’s and 1980’s Argentina.  The digital collection is a subset of the Marshall T. Meyer papers held at Duke University’s David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

Marshall Meyer was an activist rabbi who expounded a politically engaged Conservative Judaism. After being ordained rabbi in 1958, Meyer and his wife moved to Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1959, where they were to stay until 1984. Meyer led the re-invigoration of Argentina’s Jewish community and lived and fought through the political upheavals and turmoil of the 1970s and 1980s, openly speaking out against the human rights abuses perpetrated under the rule of the military junta, and visiting and attempting to secure the release of prisoners who were unlawfully incarcerated. After the return of democracy to Argentina in 1983, Argentine President Raul Alfonsin recruited Meyer to serve on the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (CONADEP in Spanish), which led a national investigation to establish the extent of the abuses suffered under the military junta.

Meyer returned to the United States in 1984 and took over the helm of congregation B’nai Jeshurun, reviving the decaying New York City synagogue and transforming it into a dynamic center for Judaism in the United States. Meyer advocated for inter-religious dialogue and peace efforts, the plight of marginalized groups within the United States, against human rights abuses in Central America (El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Guatemala), and for peace and respect for human rights in Israel and Palestine.

The items in the Marshall T. Meyer digital collection focus on his work in Argentina on behalf of human rights.  Out of a total of over 64 linear feet of material in the Marshall T. Meyer papers, approximately 8 linear feet of paper documents were identified as particularly prescient for human rights history and research.  These were digitized and individually cataloged and resulted in a digital collection of 1,025 items including correspondence, project files, subject files, publications, and other documents.  The web portal allows researchers to access individual documents via subject, document type, date, language, and titles.  Future enhancements to the collection will include addition of archival descriptions and access and the addition of a/v material.

The Marshall T. Meyer digital collection is complimented by two other digital initiatives: the Fondo Marshall Meyer (http://www.memoriaabierta.org.ar/bases/opac/fondos/meyer/index.html ) produced by Memoria Abierta and the on-line exhibit  “I Have No Right to Be Silent, The Human Rights Legacy of the Rabbi Marshall T. Meyer” (http://exhibits.library.duke.edu/exhibits/show/ihavenorighttobesilent) produced by The Duke Human Rights Archive in partnership with the Duke Human Rights Center and the Center for Jewish Studies at Duke.

For more information, contact Patrick Stawski.

 

Holly Ackerman
Duke University

Facebook Twitter Email

Latest Topics

SALALM LVII Registration Deadline

Early registration for SALALM ends tomorrow, May 18th! Please register now to avoid late fees.     [Read More]

Special Collections Curator – University of Texas at Austin

Special Collections Curator Rare Books and Manuscripts Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Library The University of Texas [Read More]

SALALM LVII Schedule update

An almost final version is now available under Conference / Program, above!   Lynn Shirey [Read More]

Recent Comments

Socrates Silva had this to say

Great column as always! Have you noticed the Atlas Cienciométricos on the Redalyc site? This has been something they Read the post

sgw had this to say

Perhaps also a list of library associations or organizations? Read the post

Melissa Gasparotto had this to say

That sounds like a great Wiki project. If there's enough interest I'll start the wiki and we can all add to it. Read the post

Daisy Dominguez had this to say

Thanks, M! Read the post

Veronica Finn had this to say

My heart is heavy and I'm deeply sadened to now learn of the passing of a dear friend. The last time I spoke to Alan Read the post