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Photo by DAVIDSON L U N A on Unsplash

The Rotation publishes an annual post for International Holocaust Remembrance Day, which is observed this year on Tuesday, January 27. Read past posts.

As the last living survivors of the Holocaust pass away, the world loses their eyewitness accounts and testimonies of the atrocities that occurred during this dark period of the 20th century. The history of the Holocaust and the important messages it offers are being operationalized in new ways to underscore its relevance to contemporary professional practice in healthcare.

A recent publication in the Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing deals with one such attempt. In their article, "Legacy of Medicine and Nursing During the Holocaust and Its Contemporary Relevance: Addressing Implicit and Explicit Bias and Health Care Inequities," Julie Kruse and Hedy Wald report on a two-hour seminar that provided nurses an opportunity to learn and critically reflect on the role of doctors and nurses during the Holocaust, and the outcomes the seminar can help nurses achieve, including heightened awareness and mitigation of implicit and explicit bias.

Wald, a Clinical Professor of Family Medicine at Brown University, is also the Commissioner of the Lancet Commission on Medicine, Nazism, and the Holocaust. The Lancet Commission was convened in 2023 in order to, in part, help develop educational approaches to the subject of the Holocaust which "promote ethical conduct, moral development, and the formation of a professional identity based on compassion..." (Czech et al., 2023).

The Lancet Commission requires Holocaust history to be taught across health professions education in order for this professional identity formation to be history-informed. The history of the Holocaust involves many threads, including "the complicity of health professionals in the persecution and dismissal of Jewish health professionals, forced sterilization and 'euthanasia' murder of the disabled, coerced 'experimentation,' and the genocide of Jews and mass murder of other groups" (Kruse & Wald, 2025).

The curriculum was introduced as a two-hour continuing education seminar which met the implicit bias requirement for CE in nursing, which is required for licensure in Michigan (where the seminar took place). The learning objectives of the seminar included: describing why it is a moral imperative to learn about egregious ethical violations committed by health professionals in Nazi Germany; explaining the history of healers becoming killers and providing examples of health professionals in the Nazi period who exhibited moral courage; identifying social and professional factors contributing to the complicity of health professionals in the Holocaust's mass atrocities; and examining the legacy of the Holocaust for relevance to implicit and explicit bias, healthcare inequities, and preservation of human dignity (Kruse & Wald, 2025).

The 63 participants in the seminar were surveyed prior to and following the activity on a number of aspects of their knowledge of the subject prior to the seminar, and the effectiveness of the training following the seminar. Nurses participating described "new awareness of [the historical facts of] medical experimentation, euthanasia programs for children, and health care institutions as execution sites" (Kruse & Wald, 2025). Nurses reflected positively on the opportunities given for them to reflect creatively, both in writing and in an art interpretation activity. Participants were instructed in the STOP technique (stop , take a breath, observe, proceed) for self-reflection in order to mitigate bias. Nurse educators attending the seminar indicated they planned to incorporate Holocaust content into their "ethics content, research modules, and classroom discussions" (Kruse & Wald, 2025). Overall, the authors found that the seminar underscored the importance of bringing together historical, ethical, and bias education for nurse professional development.

Viewed more broadly, healthcare practitioner education can only benefit from future practitioners developing deeper awareness of the atrocities of the Nazi period, more specifically as they pertain to the ways in which practitioners were derelict in their duties as caregivers, and more broadly in terms of the lessons the Holocaust provides that may help avoid implicit and explicit bias.

References

Czech, H., Hildebrandt, S., Reis, S. P., Chelouche, T., Fox, M., González-López, E., Lepicard, E., Ley, A., Offer, M., Ohry, A., Rotzoll, M., Sachse, C., Siegel, S. J., Šimůnek, M., Teicher, A., Uzarczyk, K., von Villiez, A., Wald, H. S., Wynia, M. K., & Roelcke, V. (2023). The Lancet Commission on medicine, Nazism, and the Holocaust: historical evidence, implications for today, teaching for tomorrow. The Lancet (British Edition), 402(10415), 1867–1940. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(23)01845-7

Kruse, J. A., & Wald, H. S. (2025). Legacy of Medicine and Nursing During the Holocaust and Its Contemporary Relevance: Addressing Implicit and Explicit Bias and Health Care Inequities. The Journal of Continuing Education in Nursing, 56(12), 527–534. https://doi.org/10.3928/00220124-20250926-01

Decorative background image. Text: Himmelfarb is Closed! January 26-27, 2026!

Due to the snowstorm, Himmelfarb Library's physical building is closed on Tuesday, January 27, 2026 and Wednesday, January 28, 2026.

Accessing Resources

While our doors are closed, our digital library never closes! You can continue to access all electronic resources, including databases, e-journals, and e-books, via the Himmelfarb website.

Chat reference services will be available from 8:00am to 8:00pm.

Book Sale Update!

The Annual Book Sale, originally scheduled for Tuesday, January 27th - Friday, January 30th has been postponed to next week, February 3-6, 2026.

Stay safe and warm!

Dark blue background with yellow lightbulb. Text: 2026 Himmelfarb Book Sale. January 27th to January 30th.

Whether you are looking to bolster your personal reference collection, find a new study guide, or find resources to help you prep for board exams, the time has come to get it all at bargain prices! Himmelfarb Library’s Annual Book Sale begins next week.

Stop by the library to browse a wide selection of medical and health sciences texts. This is a fantastic opportunity to pick up essential resources at a fraction of their retail cost.

When: Join us on the first floor for four days of deals!

DateHours
January 27th (Tues)8:00am - 8:00pm
January 28th (Weds)8:00am - 8:00pm
January 29th (Thurs)8:00am - 8:00pm
January 30th (Fri)8:00am - 12:00pm (Noon)

Location: Himmelfarb’s 1st Floor Reference Alcove (located conveniently near the restrooms)

Pricing & Payment: Our prices are simple and affordable - perfect for a student budget!

ItemPrice
Hardcover Books$4
Paperback Books$2
Flashcards$2

Credit Card payments only.

Come early for the best selection!

Decorative background images. Text: 2026 Himmelfarb Book Sale. January 27th to January 30th. Text is in main post.

GW SMHS & ARC Logos. Text included in post.

The 10th Annual SMHS Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Advancing the Dream Lecture features J. Keith Melancon, MD, Professor of Surgery at GW, Chief of the Transplant Institute and Division of Transplant Surgery, and Medical Director of the Ron and Joy Paul Kidney Center.

Date: Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Time: 12:00 pm (Noon) - 1:30 pm

Where: Ross Hall 117 

Register today!

In-person attendance is strongly encouraged. Zoom registration is available.

This event will be recorded.

Promo image that includes pictures of speaker & MLK. Text included in post.

The 2026 theme is “Advancing the Dream: The Responsibility of Now.” Inspired by Dr. King’s powerful words, “We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now,” we are compelled to consider how history will remember what we did with our moment.

Dr. King’s message challenges each of us in medicine and the health sciences to move from awareness to accountability, from empathy to engagement. The dream advances only when principle becomes action, and silence gives way to courage.

pictureof someone giving blood

Have you ever given blood? Almost everyone has encountered posters and advertisements for blood drives, either at school, work or other gathering places. A blood drive can look strange at first: my first blood drive took place in our school gymnasium. I can still remember how odd it was to see the place I associated with dodge ball lined with people on cots sipping juice as nurses walked by. I didn’t end up donating myself - I was scared of needles at the time - but for the rest of the school day, we could always tell who donated by the bandage on their arm. 

I eventually got over my fear of needles by being on the other side of the blood donation process. In 2020, I had to receive multiple blood transfusions, and let me tell you, after two days in the hospital being poked with needles, it becomes mundane. If it wasn’t for those transfusions, I doubt I would have recovered as quickly as I did. I owe my health to the kindness of strangers.

January is National Blood Donor Month. Over 6.8 million people donate blood each year, but there is always demand for more.In the United States, someone needs blood or platelets every two seconds (American Red Cross). If you want to help others, see if you’re eligible, and stop by your local blood drive. The Red Cross even has a tool to help you find a location to donate.

Patients like me will thank you.

American Red Cross. (2026). US Blood Supply Facts. Facts About Blood Supply In The U.S. | Red Cross Blood Services. https://www.redcrossblood.org/donate-blood/how-to-donate/how-blood-donations-help/blood-needs-blood-supply.html

Picture of study tables on Himmelfarb Library's 1st floor. Mural on back wall in background.

This post was authored by Joe McGraw.

We hope everyone had a long and restful Winter Break and are ready to get back into gear for Spring semester classes! We are looking forward to seeing everyone back in Himmelfarb Library!

As always, Himmelfarb Library is here to support you as you work this semester. Let us remind you of the basics of how we can help!

Library Hours

Himmelfarb’s regular hours:

Himmelfarb LibraryReference ServicesConsultation
Monday - Thursday6:00am - Midnight8:00am - 8:00pm8:30am - 5:00pm
Friday6:00am - Midnight8:00am - 7:00pm8:30am - 5:00pm
Saturday - Sunday8:00am - MidnightNot staffedNot staffed

The Hours page on the Himmelfarb website lists exceptions to our regular hours, including holiday closures.

Study Areas

Himmelfarb is a great place to study and has a variety of options to meet different needs and study styles.

  • Social Zone – 1st Floor: Our first floor is our social floor! It’s a great place to study with your classmates, hang out with friends between classes, and take a study break. We have a collection of coloring books, board games, puzzles, and a chessboard for when you need to unwind and catch a breath.
  • Silent Zone - 2nd Floor: Himmelfarb’s second floor is completely silent and reserved for graduate and advanced degree students. It’s the perfect place when you need no distractions so you can focus on your studies. Librarians enforce silence on this floor; even whispering can bother your fellow students.
  • Quiet Zone - 3rd Floor: The library’s third floor is a quiet (but not silent) study area. Whispering and quiet conversation are acceptable, but please be respectful of other students. For large study groups, the first floor or a study room might be better.
  • Group Study Rooms: Our study rooms are located on the second and third floors, and are great for study groups! Please reserve a room in advance to make sure the room is all yours! However, these rooms aren’t noise-proof, so please keep conversations quiet so you don’t bother others in the Silent and Quiet Zones.

Our Collections

Himmelfarb has extensive collections of online resources, including 120 databases, more than 6,500 e-books, and more than 6,600 journals that you can access anytime, any place, on and off-campus. Our main print collection, located on the basement floor, is available for checkout usually for three weeks, and if you need more time, you can renew the books at the first-floor service desk or from your library account twice.

On the first floor, we also have our Reference Collection and our Humanities and Health Collection. Reference Collection books are handbooks, encyclopedias, and dictionaries that can provide reliable information at your fingertips. Unlike our main collection, Reference books cannot be checked out. Books in our Humanities & Health Collection include fiction and popular non-fiction titles focused on medical or health-related topics. Take a break from textbooks and scholarly articles and enjoy a fun book when you need a break. Humanities and Health Collection items can be checked out for three weeks at a time.

If you can’t find what you need from our collection, we can get it for you from another library! We can borrow physical books from other universities in the DC area with the Consortium Loan Service, and we can get articles and books from the whole country (sometimes the world) using Docs2Go(ILL). Learn which option is best for you on our Borrowing from Other Libraries page. 

Technology Resources

A library is more than just a warehouse for books and journals. We also have a lot of technology and equipment for you to use!

  • Virtual Reality Headsets: Use this awesome technology to explore virtual anatomy as well as healthy living apps. 
  • 3D Printing: We have two 3D Printers that students can use for free. Check out our 3D Printing Guide for more information, as well as databases of 3D Models.
  • BodyViz: This interactive anatomy tool is a great way to explore and learn anatomy in a fun and new way!
  • Statistical Software: We have specialized software installed on some of the computers on the 3rd floor, including ArcGIS, SPSS, SAS, NVivo, and MATLAB. 
  • Recording Equipment: We have digital camcorders, voice recorders, and ring lights for your media-related projects. You can reserve these in advance to make sure you can get them.
  • Medical Equipment: We have suture kits, a blood pressure monitor, an ultrasound machine, an ECG Monitor, an iPhone otoscope, and a fitness tracker available for you. 
  • Tech & Support: We have chargers for your iPhones and MacBooks, USB-C to HDMI OUT and USB-C to USB-A In adapters, HDMI Cables, headphones, and dry-erase markers for you to use. We also have free earplugs at the first-floor desk.

Reference and Research Support

Himmelfarb librarians do more than provide you with resources! We can also help you do research and find what you need for your work, whether you’re looking for just the right article for a class assignment or need help with a literature search or systematic review. We can also help you learn how to use our resources like RefWorks and Covidence

Come by the first-floor service desk to get help from our friendly staff in person, or use our Ask a Librarian service to chat virtually. Our chat services are staffed by real Himmelfarb librarians (definitely not AI), so you can be sure you’re getting help from an expert. You can also always email us a question or schedule a meeting with a reference librarian at himmelfarb@gwu.edu

Connect with Us!

You can find us online on Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook, and YouTube for the latest Himmelfarb news and updates! Subscribe to our blog to make sure you never miss anything from us!

We’re looking forward to helping you in the new year. Cheers to a successful Spring semester!

Decorative image for Winter Study Break Guide

Christa Ebert, Uno Lady
Date: January 2, 2026
Location: Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center (In-Person and Livestream)
Cost: Free (4 ticket limit)

Musician and mixed-media artist Christa Ebert—performing as Uno Lady—creates dream-like soundscapes using layered vocals and nature-inspired visuals. Experience her new video installation Arbor Aria, a collaboration with old-growth forests, followed by a live Uno Lady performance.

Zoolights
Date: Now through January 3
Location: Smithsonian’s National Zoo, 3001 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20008
Cost: $9

Join the thousands of visitors who make ZooLights, powered by Pepco, a part of their annual holiday tradition. The event includes live music performances, tasty winter treats and plenty of opportunities for holiday shopping. Environmentally friendly LED lights and dozens of glowing animal lanterns transform the Smithsonian's National Zoo into a winter wonderland. Note that timed passes are required.

Photography and the Black Arts Movement, 1955-1985
Date: Now through January 4
Location: National Gallery of Art, 6th Street & Constitution Avenue, NW
Cost: Free

The National Gallery of Art hosts a monumental tribute to the work of Black artists from around the world. Photography and the Black Arts Movement spans four decades and features roughly 150 pieces by more than 100 artists, including luminaries such as Gordon Parks, Carrie Mae Weems, Frank Stewart, Billy Abernathy, David C. Driskell, Lorna Simpson and many more.

Online Meditation/McLean Meditation Institute
Date: January 4, 2026
Location: Online
Cost: Free guided meditation

We all need healing and support. Together we can manage our heightened stress levels and nourish our sense of community.  As health professionals, you are experiencing higher levels of anxiety, stress, and depression than normal.  Evidence shows that effective wellness programming and strong institutional leadership committed to a culture of wellness care can make a difference.

All are welcome to join any of the four, free, online sessions on Wednesdays when you can learn and practice meditation.  Some sessions offer mindfulness, compassion, and gratitude, as well as mantra, self-inquiry, and more taught by master teachers from the McLean Meditation Institute (MMI) as well as the director, Sarah McLean.

Meet your mind and soothe the feelings of panic, fear, and worry with mindful self-compassion. Become more resilient as you cultivate restful awareness through easy guided mindfulness and meditation practices.  Explore contentment, simplicity, and gratitude.

Also, you can watch/listen at your convenience to guided meditations and mindfulness sessions from MMI staff on YouTube.

January Joy: A Comedy Show
Date: January 9, 2026
Location: Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center (In-Person and Livestream)
Cost: Free (4 ticket limit)

Enjoy a comedy showcase featuring Yasmin Elhady, Mahmoud Jaber, Rola Z, and headliner Abbas Wahab.

Online advance reservations for a given performance date will open on a rolling basis, opening every Wednesday two weeks out from the date.

Capital Accomodations
Date: January 1-30, 2026
Location: George Washington Museum and the Textile Museum, 701 21st St., NW
Cost: Free

From iconic landmarks to forgotten establishments, discover some of the historical hotels, motels and inns that hosted visitors to Washington, D.C. Advertisements, travel guides and prints from the Albert H. Small Washingtoniana Collection introduce stories from proprietors and noteworthy guests. 

From A to DC: Transportation in Washington
Date: January 1-30, 2026
Location: George Washington Museum and the Textile Museum, 701 21st St., NW
Cost: Free

Traverse the nation’s capital by air, land or sea in this exhibition exploring the history of Washington’s transportation systems. Artworks from the Albert H. Small Washingtoniana Collection depict innovations in travel that transformed the District during the 19th and 20th centuries.

Source Material: Lessons in Responsible Fashion
Date: January 1-30, 2026
Location: George Washington Museum and the Textile Museum, 701 21st St., NW
Cost: Free

The impacts of overproduction and overconsumption in the global fashion industry are uniquely modern challenges, but promising solutions can be found in textile traditions from the past. This exhibition pairs historical garments from The Textile Museum Collection with works by contemporary fashion designers returning to more responsible uses of materials and resources.  

Music Program at St. Ann DC, “From Past to the Future”
Date: January 18, 2026; 3:00-5:00PM
Location: St. Ann Catholic Church, 4001 Yuma St., NW
Cost: Free but donations are welcome to support the ongoing Concert Series

All performances are free and open to the public! This is a ticketless events, and a freewill offering is gratefully accepted.

Art music is an expression of the soul, and through the God-given gifts of a performer, can bring the listener closer to the source of all that is, Our Lord. Gifted artists, performing in our church, provide an opportunity for people who might not otherwise have the chance to experience this music performed live, to do so in an environment that inspires the human spirit to seek a closer connection to God.

21st Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Peace Walk and Parade
Date: January 19, 2026
Location: Martin Luther King Junior Avenue Southeast
Cost: Free to $108.55

Celebrate Dr. King's legacy at the 2025 MLK Holiday DC with a Peace Walk, Parade, Wellness Fair, and Prayer Breakfast. Join us!

Unbound: Narrative Art of the Plains
Date: Now through January 20
Location: National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street & Independence Ave, NW
Cost: Free

The National Museum of the American Indian celebrates narrative art among Native nations of the Great Plains with an exciting new exhibition. You'll see historical works alongside contemporary commissions, from battle records to ledger books to pop culture takes.

Wayne Tucker (Jazz)
Date: January 22, 2026
Location: Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center (In-Person and Livestream)
Cost: Free (4 ticket limit)

Miles Davis meets Stevie Wonder—Wayne Tucker and The Bad Mothas present “Grief and Gratitude.”

Online advance reservations for a given performance date will open on a rolling basis, opening every Wednesday two weeks out from the date.

Rik Freeman: Wade in the Waters
Date: Now through February 19
Wednesday & Thursday, 10am-5pm
Location: Phillips @THEARC, 1801 Mississippi Avenue, SE, Washington, DC 20020
Cost: Free

DC artist Rik Freeman’s work is showcased in-depth at this free exhibition displayed at Phillips@THEARC. For more than three decades, Freeman has engaged history, community, resilience and joy in his work. Wade in the Waters zooms in on waterways – from the beaches of Bahia to the Anacostia River – and how they connect to the diaspora over generations.