Project Team
Leadership
Prof. Karen Frostig, PhD, Founding Artistic and Executive Director, Locker of Memory Lead Artist, Cultural Historian, Professor of Public Art, and Community Activist, Lesley University and Scholar in Holocaust Studies and Public Memory, WSRC, Brandeis University. President of NGO, The Transnational Holocaust Memorial Project (2019-) and Director of The Vienna Project (2013-2014). Frostig conceived, designed, organized, funded, implemented, managed, and produced the Locker of Memory project.
Director and Producer “Day of Remembrance”, 2024 Leonard Bernstein Festival of the Creative Arts, Brandeis University. US/AT
Prof. Karen Frostig is a public memory artist, writer, cultural historian, activist, Professor of Art at Lesley University, and a former Resident Scholar, and now Affiliated Scholar at the Women Studies Research Center at Brandeis University. Karen is Founding Director of the Locker of Memory (2019-), a multi-media project located in Riga, Latvia, and dedicated to remembering 3985 victims of the Jungfernhof concentration camp. The first order of business was to establish the historic record of Latvia’s first Nazi concentration camp, established under German occupation. Abandoned and neglected for 80 years, Karen assembled a team of historians and geospatial scientists to find a mass grave containing up to 800 bodies. Restoring history and memory to Latvia’s first Nazi concentration camp where her grandparents were murdered, Karen is currently embarking on the development of a permanent memorial at this unremembered site.
In 2013-2014, Karen was Director of The Vienna Project (2013-2014), Vienna’s first naming memorial representing seven different victim groups in sixteen districts of Vienna. The year-long project concluded at the Austrian National Library at the Hofburg Palace. 88,000 names of seven different victim groups were projected onto the facades of buildings facing Josephsplatz, as family members gathered in circles, reading letters from murdered relatives.
On January 27, 2023, Karen was invited to present her family’s Holocaust history and her groundbreaking work in Riga at the United Nations General Assembly, in the 2023 International Holocaust Day Remembrance Program. The New York Times Sunday paper, section one, featured her work with a half page article. A second review of Karen’s work as a public memory artist appeared in the Sunday Arts and Culture section of the Boston Globe.
In 2017, Karen received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Massachusetts College of Art and Design, and became the International Caucus Honor Roll Awardee for Art and Activism, presented by the UN Program of Women's Caucus for Art. Karen is also the recipient of numerous awards from foundations and institutes, such as the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA), the German Embassy in Latvia, Targum Shlishi, the Hadassah Brandeis Institute, the National Fund for the Victims of National Socialism in the Republic of Austria, the Zukunftsfond of the Republic of Austria, Austria’s BKA-Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture for New Media, the city of Vienna’s Cultural Council; Massachusetts Cultural Council, the Puffin Foundation, and many more.
Karen published several chapters in books, journal articles, and co-authored two books. A short list includes: “Activism and Citizenship: Performing Memory and Acts of Memorialization in Austria” in Making and Being Made: Visual Representations and/of Citizenship (Routledge Advances in Art and Visual Studies, 2018); “Coming to Terms with the Past: The Vienna Project as an interactive, interdisciplinary model of memorialization” in Genocide, Memory and Representation (Springer Publishing Company, 2017); “Ruptured Memory on the Streets of Vienna.” Journal for the Study of Antisemitism, Special Issue: Oral History and Life Stories Network (2016).
Karen holds dual citizenship in the Republic of Austria and the United States.
Ilya Lensky, Chief Advisor. Historian, Director Museum “Jews in Latvia” Riga, LV. Board member of the Latvian Association of Museums from 2014-2016, a board member of ICOM Latvia, and a Latvian delegate to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance since 2014.
Kabren Levinson, Strategic Advisor and Technologist. Website and Smartphone app developer, Chief Technology Officer for The Vienna Project, US/AT
Kabren is an entrepreneur and business problem solver in E-Commerce, Growth Marketing, and Product Development. A technologist, Amazon expert, and data-driven designer, he is a jack of all trades at heart. Kabren is currently Director of Product Management at The RepTrak Company, the leading data, analytics, and insights platform powering global companies to build credibility worldwide. Kabren is also Co-Founder and Managing Director of Levels Consulting Group, a full-stack digital marketing and e-commerce consultancy.
Previously, Kabren was a Product Manager at Chewy.com, a leading US-based online retailer of pet food and other pet-related supplies, where he led the brand, SEO, DAM, and content marketing roadmaps, and Senior Manager, E-Commerce at Dorel Juvenile Group, a global leader in juvenile products with well-known brands like Safety 1st, Maxi-Cosi, and Quinny, where he managed all e-commerce technology, operations, supply chain, and marketing projects including the launch of 3rd party marketplaces on Amazon, Walmart, Jet.com, and eBay. Kabren also served as CTO and Project Consultant of The Vienna Project.
History Team
Richards Plavnieks, Ph.D. Lead Historian. Assistant Professor of History, Florida Southern College, US
Biography
Richards Plavnieks is a third-generation American Latvian. His grandparents came to the United States in 1949 and he himself grew up around the Latvian exile enclave of Rockville, Maryland. As a child and teenager, between 1993 and 1998, he lived in Moscow and Rīga, where his interest in his family’s background and the Second World War was kindled.
Dr. Plavnieks took his degree in Modern German History from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he also earned minor fields in Eastern European History and Gender Studies. His academic focus is on the Holocaust in Eastern Europe and the attendant postwar legal repercussions on either side of the “Iron Curtain.” His dissertation, Nazi Collaborators on Trial during the Cold War: Viktors Arājs and the Latvian Auxiliary Security Police, was written under the supervision of Professor Christopher Browning and defended in 2013. Under the same title, the manuscript was published in revised form as a monograph by Palgrave Macmillan in 2017 and is available here: https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783319576718. A Latvian-language translation was released in 2020 as Apsūdzības pret Viktoru Arāju un Latviešu drošības palīgpoliciju and is available here: https://veikals.latvijasmediji.lv/shop/autors/308.
The book touches a variety of historical topics: Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, Eastern European collaboration, the Cold War, post-1945 international criminal law, the Soviet Union, both West and East Germany, and Baltic studies. Showing the intricate interrelationships of these overlapping areas of inquiry, with Nazi crimes as their nexus, was one goal of the project. But the work also has significance for Latvians’ grappling with their country’s encounter with Nazi Germany – developments analogous to postwar Germany’s Vergangenheitsbewältigung, or “coming to terms with the past,” that were delayed and complicated by Latvia’s domination by the USSR until 1991. As it deals both with Latvia’s most notorious killers and their post-war fates on both sides of the Iron Curtain, as well as contemporary Latvians’ responses to the investigations and trials in different political contexts, the book is, in a sense, a record of the earliest phases of coming to terms with Latvian collaboration, and one that historicizes the challenge. In fact, the book itself is an artifact of this yet ongoing process, to which it is to be hoped the book, in both languages, will positively contribute.
Since 2013, Dr. Plavnieks has taught undergraduate courses on 19th Century German Political Philosophy, Nazi Germany, Interwar Fascism & Nazism, the Second World War, the Holocaust, the Soviet Union, the Cold War, and the Postwar Rebirth of Europe at five separate institutions: the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Rollins College, Stetson University, the University of Central Florida, and, finally, Florida Southern College – where he was appointed Assistant Professor of History in Fall 2018.
As all scholars should be, Dr. Plavnieks is committed to the discovery, understanding, and widest possible communication of knowledge of the past in order to understand the present and maintain the hope of a better future. To further these ends, he is enthusiastically engaged in the Lock(er) of Memory Project.
Education
Doctor of Philosophy, earned under the supervision of Professor Christopher Browning, Modern German History concentration / Eastern European History and Gender Studies subfields, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, March 2013
Master of Arts, History. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, May 2008
Bachelor of Arts, History Major, German Minor. Stetson University, May 2004
Evan Robins, Historian/Research Coordinator (2021-2023). Bachelor of Arts in Russian Studies, Brandeis University, US and Masters of Philosophy in History, University of Cambridge, UK
Biography
Evan Robins is a historian of Eastern Europe. He studies the history of political radicalism and resistance in the Russian Empire during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Evan graduated summa cum laude from Brandeis University with highest honors in Russian Studies. As an undergraduate, he was awarded the Humanities Fellowship, Schiff Fellowship for independent research, and the Dr. Eberhard Frey Prize for excellence in Russian Studies. His senior thesis on the relationship between apophatic theology and the revolutionary movement in Dostoevsky’s novel Devils won the Dorothy Blumenfeld Moyer Memorial Award for creative work in the languages and literature. He also spent a year as a Visiting Student at Hertford College, University of Oxford, studying Russian populism, socialism, and anarchism under Dr. Thomas Marsden.
He is now a graduate student in History at St. Catharine’s College, University of Cambridge, where he is the recipient of the MPhil History Bursary. At Cambridge, he will write his Masters dissertation on the history of the Jewish Labour Bund in Latvia. In addition to his work with Lock(er) of Memory, Evan also works as a research assistant to Dr. Helen Berger, studying the intersection of neo-paganism and the resurgent Alt-Right.
Fred Zimmak, Descendant of a survivor from Jungfernhof, writer, researcher, and programmer. Studied IT at Stockholm University. He worked as programmer at Trygg-Hansa Insurance Company, in Stockholm, Sweden, and later at SEB a large bank in Sweden. SE.
Biography
Fred Zimmak, son of Leonhard Zimmak, deported from Hamburg, Germany to the
Jungfernhof concentration camp on December 6, 1941. Leonhard Zimmak at age 38
was rescued from Kiel, Germany on 1 May 1945 by the “White Buses,” a Swedish Red
Cross operation. He settled in Sweden after the war. Fred’s mother came from Vienna.
She was deported first to Auschwitz, and later sent to Ravensbrück. She at age 20 at
the end of the war, was also rescued by the White Buses.
Fred studied IT at Stockholm university. He worked as programmer at Trygg-Hansa
Insurance Company, in Stockholm, Sweden, and later at SEB a large bank in Sweden.
For the last 25 years Fred has done ancestral research. In 2020, he and Bernd
Philipsen co-edited “Wir sollten leben: Am 1. Mai 1945 von Kiel mit Weißen Bussen
nach Schweden in die Freiheit” (We should live: on May 1, 1945 from Kiel with the
white buses to the freedom in Sweden), published by Novalis Verlag, Germany. He tells
the story about his father and 152 other Jews, rescued from Nordmark, a labor
education camp similar to a concentration camp, close to Kiel in Germany.
Since 2014 Fred lives outside Flensburg in northern Germany. During the last 10 years,
he has returned to photography, and had several exhibitions in Flensburg.
History Professor Advisor
Laura Jockusch, Historian/Advisor. Albert Abramson Associate Professor of Holocaust Studies at Brandeis University, US
Biography
Joanna Beata Michlic is a social and cultural historian, and founder and first Director of HBI (Hadassah-Brandeis Institute) Project on Families, Children, and the Holocaust at Brandeis University. She is an Honorary Senior Research Associate at the UCL Centre for the Study of Collective Violence, the Holocaust and Genocide, UCL Institute for Advances Studies, and an Honorary Senior Associate at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES) in London. Her research focuses on social and cultural history of Poland and East European Jews, the Holocaust and its memory in Europe, and antisemitism and nationalism in Eastern Europe. She is a recipient of many prestigious academic awards and fellowships, most recently Gerda Henkel Fellowship, 2017 - 2021.
Her major publications include Neighbors Respond: The Controversy about Jedwabne (2004; co-edited with Antony Polonsky), Poland's Threatening Other: The Image of the Jew from 1880 to the Present, (translated into Polish in 2015 and nominated for the Best History Book of Kazimierz Moczarski Award 2016 in Poland; Hebrew translation, with new epilogue, by Yad Vashem Studies in preparation, 2019), and Bringing the Dark Past to Light: The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe, co-edited with John-Paul Himka (Lincoln, NUP, 2012).
Her latest book is Jewish Family 1939 –Present: History, Representation, and Memory, Brandeis University Press/NEUP, January 2017), made to the Ethical Inquiry list of the best books published in 2017 at Brandeis University: http://www.brandeis.edu/ethics/ethicalinquiry/2017/December.html
Her workshop proposal, “Representations of Polish Rescuers of Jews in a Comparative Perspective: Lessons from the Holocaust for Contemporary Europe”, with a participation of 15 academics from Poland and abroad, has been selected to the GEOP workshops programme at the Polin Museum in Warsaw in August 2021.
Design & Tech Team, 3-D tour and Interactive Map
Hazal (H) Uzunkaya, Director 3-D Tour project (2021). Designer/Research Technologist (2021--2023). Brandeis University Library/ Research Technology & Innovation, and on staff at MakerLab, TU
Interns
Xan Jiang Maddock-Mark, Internship (2021). Stitching and Editing 3-D Video, working with Hazal Uzunkaya, Head of Brandeis MakerLab. US
Marissa Wandry, Graphic design student (2021). Lesley College of Art + Design. US
Hazal (H) Uzunkaya has worked as a Technologist since 2016, and as an XR specialist since 2018. She is from Istanbul, Turkey and has worked as a translator for Asahi Shimbun in conflict areas in Turkey before finishing her Neuroscience degree. While H was a student worker at Brandeis University, she was an essential member of the team that founded the MakerLab. She has designed new research technologies and helped develop research workflows in various fields, from Neuroscience to Physics. Passionate about the use of technology in sharing experiences, H has collaborated on creating immersive experiences for Brandeis Researchers and students as well as private organizations. She has shared her expertise in XR and Maker spaces to help create similar services and spaces for XR in Learning, XR Access, VR First, Verizon Media and other Higher Ed institutions.
Shalini Prasad. Integrative Designer. (2022-2023). Assistant Professor, Lesley University College of Art + Design.
Biography
Shalini Prasad is an educator, integrative designer, brand consultant, and graphic artist. She is an Assistant Professor of Design at the College of Art and Design at Lesley University, with a focus on typography and visual communication. She has taught design at Roger Williams University, guest lectured at RISD, and various design schools in India. Alongside her academic appointments she runs a professional practice under DeSha Consulting, with domain expertise in brand strategy, identity, print, publication, and environmental graphic design.
Shalini comes to Lesley with an educational background that spans architecture, graphic design, and fine arts; over twenty five years of global industry experience; and a deep passion for teaching and visual storytelling. Her interests encompass a collaborative and holistic approach to design that is human and socio centric. Her trans-disciplinary thinking enables her to seamlessly explore various modalities of visual communication beyond the two-dimensional canvas, while fearlessly dismissing conventional boundaries, in her pedagogy, research and practice.
She is honored to be working with this collaborative team on such a meaningful endeavor.
Biography
Jewish Studies Scholar Richard Freund (1955-2022).
July 15, 2022
By Laurie Baron
SAN DIEGO — Dr. Richard A. Freund passed away in Charlottesville, Virginia on July 14, 2022 from complications arising from the rejection of a bone marrow transplant he had received 18 years ago. He held an MA, PhD, and rabbinic ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary and the Bertram and Gladys Aaron Endowed Professorship in Jewish Studies at Christopher Newport University in Newport News, Virginia since 2019.
Before assuming this position, he had occupied the Maurice Greenberg Professorship of Jewish History and directed the Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Hartford since 1999 and had taught at the University of Nebraska-Omaha the prior decade, and at St. Lawrence University from 1987 until 1989. He directed the Seminario Rabínico Latinoamericano in Buenos Aires from 1984 to 1986.
Richard had strong ties to San Diego. He had been a visiting professor at UCSD in 1982-1983 and 1986-1987. As director of the Lipinsky Institute, I invited him several times to lecture at SDSU. He curated an exhibition the Institute sponsored consisting of artifacts his archeological team had discovered in Bethsaida, a village from where several of Christ’s disciples hailed. In one week the exhibition attracted 10,000 visitors! Moreover recently, I hosted him when he delivered a lecture on his excavations of Mary’s Well in Nazareth.
Richard’s scholarship and teaching left a deep impact on one of his UCSD students, Rabbi David Kornberg of Congregation Beth Am. When I inquired about their relationship for this obituary, Kornberg replied, “It is hard to put into words, but Richard helped me to understand the depth, complexity and magnitude of what Jewish learning could be. He took me on as a Teaching Assistant for a couple of his classes at UCSD and I got to know him as a person, not only as a teacher. He was kind and willing to help me try and figure out in what direction I wanted to take my life. When I was studying at UCSD, I was unsure as to whether I wanted to pursue academics or the Rabbinate. It was Richard who helped me understand that the titles were less important than the learning. I could be a pulpit Rabbi and still see the text through the academic lens if I chose to do so. His guidance allowed me to pursue both my vocation as a Rabbi as well as my passion for Talmud and Jewish learning. I will be forever grateful for his wisdom, teaching and friendship.”
I first met Richard in 1987 when he was hired by the Religious Studies Department at St. Lawrence University. As the sole Jewish Studies professor there, I annually organized a few Jewish events at a school where Jewish students constituted less than 2 % of the enrollment and which was located far from any urban Jewish center. Richard added his dynamic touch to Jewish life on campus arranging forums on a wide variety of Jewish topics and organizing a Shabbaton for Jewish students at campuses in upstate New York. He also secured the archive of his mentor, the esteemed Rabbi Seymour Siegel, to be donated to the St. Lawrence University Library.
Richard was an engaging speaker and teacher able to convey the complexities of subjects ranging from biblical archeology, the Holocaust, Jewish ethics, Latin American Jewry, Ladino, and Yiddish in terms that are understandable for general audiences as well as scholarly ones. He was particularly gifted at facilitating discussion and participation among those listening to his talks. I can’t think of anyone I have met in my 47 years in higher education who was more effective at bridging the gap between town and gown.
Although he began his career as a specialist on Jewish ethics and Jewish-Christian relations in antiquity, he broadened his field first to biblical archeology utilizing non-invasive ground penetrating sonar to reconstruct the history of biblical sites and then applied this technology to explore possible locations where the legendary city of Atlantis might have been located and to uncover Jewish sites from before and during the Holocaust in Rhodes, Sobibor, Vilna, and Warsaw.
Richard transformed the Greenberg Center at University of Hartford into one of the best Jewish Studies programs at a liberal arts college in the United States. The breadth of its course offerings and requirements for a BA in Jewish Studies is impressive for a small school. Richard recruited top-notch faculty like Avi Patt and integrated Islamic studies into his program to help students understand the contemporary conflicts in the Middle East and the experience of the Mizrahim. Richard curated exhibitions at the Center’s Jewish Museum on themes ranging from Ashkenazi culture and history, biblical archeology, the Holocaust, local Jewish history, Jewish art and music, and Sephardic culture and history. He ran annual high-school teacher training workshops on the Holocaust and Middle Eastern history.
Moreover, Richard has reported and popularized his findings through numerous books like Digging through the Bible and The Archeology of the Holocaust and 17 television documentaries broadcast on the BBC, the Discovery Channel, NOVA, and PBS. In his 20 years at University of Hartford, he led a total of 30 different expeditions to Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, the UK, Argentina, Greece, Peru, Mexico, Spain, Israel, Poland, and Lithuania. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Time, Reader’s Digest, and Newsweek.
Richard excelled at attracting donors for these activities and to endowing lectures because he was so adept at negotiating the boundaries between academia and the community. When I first visited him when he began teaching at the University of Hartford, his program was housed in a small room. Due to his fundraising efforts, the Greenberg Center built a $1.2 million facility for the program. Having directed a Jewish Studies Program, I deeply appreciate how difficult it is for most academics to cultivate such community relationships and maintain the scholarly integrity of a program. It demands an almost superhuman amount of energy and commitment. Richard possessed a rare combination of fundraising skills, organizational talents, and deep knowledge in Jewish beliefs, customs, and history.
Richard did not fear his impending death. He could leave this life knowing how much he had achieved and proud of the lingering influence his friendship, research, teaching, and writing left on those who knew him personally or professionally. Although he was only 67 years old, his copious accomplishments make it seem like he lived to the proverbial 120 years. May his memory be a blessing!
Professor Harry Jol, Geographer and Anthropologist. Ground Penetrating Radar Specialist, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Dr. Philip Reeder's research and areas of expertise focus on environmental change, paleo-climate and landscape evolution; environmental education, sustainability and the human role in environmental change; and paleo-environments, geoarchaeology and cultural landscape evolution.
During his career, Dr. Reeder has garnered grant funding from the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the National Geographic Society, among others. His fieldwork and research have been conducted around the world, including sites at Jeju Island in South Korea, Mary's Well in Nazareth, the Cave of Letters in the Judean Desert and the Northern Vaca Plateau in Belize.
Prior to joining the Bayer School as Dean, Dr. Reeder served as Director of the Environmental Science and Policy Program in the College of Arts and Sciences, Geography Department, at the University of Southern Florida. He has taught at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, the University of Nebraska at Omaha, the University of Waikato in New Zealand and Valdosta State University. In 1994, Reeder served as a prestigious Fulbright Scholar in Peru, where he led workshops about the environment for Peruvian educators and conducted environmental contamination and geoarchaeological research.
Dr. Reeder's work has appeared in the Journal of Cave and Karst Studies, Focus on Geography, Professional Geographer and Geoarchaeology and Karst: A New Perspective. He earned his Ph.D. in Geography from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, his master's degree in Geography from Western Kentucky University, and his bachelor's degree in Earth Science from Frostburg State University.
Professor Philip Reeder, Geographer and Cartographer. Professor, Center for Environmental Research & Education (CERE), Former Dean (07/13-06/21) Bayer School of Nat. & Envir. Sciences. Now: School of Science and Engineering, Duquesne University.
Harry Jol earned his B.Sc. (1987) and M.Sc. (1989) from Simon Fraser University (British Columbia, Canada) and Ph.D. (1993) from the University of Calgary (Alberta, Canada). He then was awarded to 2 post-doctoral fellowships – University of Calgary Post-Doctoral Fellow followed by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) a Simon Fraser University. In 1996, he took a position at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire where he is presently a Professor. He is an adjunct associate professor at the University of Toledo and Associate Researcher with the Bethsaida Excavations Project.
During his Master's degree he worked on the Fraser River Delta (south of Vancouver, Canada) conducting a high resolution shallow seismic program in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Canada.
During in his Ph.D. research through to the present he has utilized ground penetrating radar (GPR) at more than 1200 sites in North America, Europe, Israel, New Zealand and Australia. He has a broad background in many fields of the earth sciences, particularly geomorphology, sedimentology and more recently in geoarchaeology. Much of his research is collaborative in nature with other researchers from federal to state agencies, private industry to academic research institutes. He looks forward to collaborative research and continuing his GPR research program.
Science Team
Prof. Dr. Richard A. Freund (1955-2022) Prominent archeologist and Jewish historian and holder of the Bertram and Gladys Aaron Professor of Jewish Studies at Christopher Newport University in Newport News, VA, and author of The Archaeology of the Holocaust: Vilna, Rhodes, and Escape Tunnels. Dr. Freund has led multiple archeological projects in Europe and Israel to study both ancient Christian and Jewish sites and is the author of hundreds of scholarly articles and books.
Documentation Team, Locker of Memory, Latvia
Nikolajs Krasnopevcevs, Project Videographer. Videographer, editor and photographer working on production and post production projects for film and television in Latvia; owner of SIA “STUDIO NK.” LV
Jevgenijs Luhnevs 3-D photography/videography. (2021-2022). Filmmaker Ambassador. Innervision Team, LV
Social Media team
Constantin Cerha, Social Media Coordinator, (2022-2023).
Gedenkdienst/Alternative service AT, Intern, Museum “Jews in Latvia” in Riga, Latvia. AT
Kilian Ottitsch, Social Media Coordinator, (2022-2023). Gedenkdienst/Alternative service AT, Intern, Lipke memorial in Riga, Latvia. AT
Camillo Spiegelfeld, Social Media Coordinator. (2020-2021). Gedenkdienst /Alternative service AT; Intern, Lipke memorial in Riga, Latvia. AT
Art Team, Mourning Shroud, “Day of Remembrance”
Edward P. Malouf, Museum Professional and Integrative Designer, Content•Design Collaborative LLC, Principal.
Jennifer Varekamp, Fabric Designer, Chair and Professor of Fashion Department, Massachusetts College of Art and Design
Emily Moughan, Stitcher and graphic Designer
Documentation Team, Day of Remembrance
Mike E. Dunne, Photographer and video editor
Dan Stevens and Dave Ells, In The Car Media, LLC; videography
Josh Lifton, Deets Production, LLC., videography
Consultant, Documentary Film
Paula S. Apsell. Consultant (2021). CEO Leading Edge Productions and Executive Producer and Co-Director of The Resistance Project; Senior Executive Producer Emerita, NOVA; Senior Executive Producer NOVA & Director, WGBH Science Unit 1985-2018 WGBH Educational Foundation, Boston; and recognized with numerous individual awards for her work, including the 2018 Lifetime Achievement Emmy of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.