
During the Spring Semester of 2022, and thanks to the Mellon Foundation PhD Fellowship and the HSPH program at the University of Minnesota, I had the opportunity to work remotely with two different institutions that focus on the formation of historical memory and conscience after a period of mass-violence and/or national conflict: The Platform of European Memory and Conscience (PEMC, Czech Republic), and the Dealing with the Past Program within Swisspeace (Switzerland).
As a PhD Candidate in the history department with an interest in historical memory after a period of mass-violence, I have explored literature and taken several seminars that focus on the dynamics of the politics of historical memory in different countries and historical contexts. However, I have always been interested in learning about the non-profit and non-governmental groundwork and sociopolitical actions that create and establish historical memory laws and public policies after periods of mass-violence.
While working with the Platform for European Memory and Conscience, I aided with the translation, and oversaw the proofreading and fact checking the Spanish edition of their reader Lest We Forget: Memory of Totalitarianism in Europe. Translated into over ten European languages, this reader contains 37 life stories victims of the different totalitarian regimes in more than 20 European countries. Its purpose is to be used in different classrooms across Europe, to help educate students about Europe’s totalitarian past by allowing the students to connect with individual stories and its victims. On April 28th, managing director of the reader and co-founder of the PEMC Neela Winklemann joined the Mass Violence and Human Rights workshop at the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota, and shared with the attendees the process of creation of the book, its mission, and the impact that is having among students in the Czech Republic. The teaching of communist and Nazi violence and its aftermath may be challenging in many European countries, and a survey conducted by PEMC in 2016 showed that two thirds of Czech secondary school students believe that neither the Nazi or Communist totalitarianism have been overcome sufficiently. The creation of this reader aims to provide students and teachers with the tools to engage, learn and acknowledge the memory of totalitarianism in Europe.
While my work with the Platform for European Memory and Conscience focused on the field of secondary education, my work as part of the Dealing with the Past team at Swisspeace focused on source management and policy creation. First, I helped to manage the Dealing with the Past database of publications and sources, specifically related to archives, memory, mass-violence, and human rights. Secondly, I aided in the writing of a confidential agreement between Swisspeace and a third party, which suggested a plan of action for the implementation of Transitional Justice measures and public policies in a country that recently suffered through a period of mass-violence. Being able to help during this process was a unique and incredibly helpful experience that allowed me to further understand the work process behind the creation of national public policies and historical memory laws in the aftermath of a period of mass-violence. Moreover, I was happy to be able to contribute to the report by presenting the case of my home country, Spain, which has been dealing with the challenges of creating memory laws and public policies regarding the Spanish Civil War and the subsequent dictatorship, which ended with the death of the dictator F. Franco in 1975. During the period of transition to democracy, a silence that prevented the development of public and/or institutionalized memory was established, and only in the last two decades a new generation of activists and scholars have started to advocate for the recuperation of memory and acknowledgment of Spain’s past of mass-violence. By bringing in the Spanish case, together with other examples of historical memory and transitional justice journeys in different countries, we were able to propose a specific plan of action of specific memory public policies that have aided in other countries’ processes of national reconciliation.
Given the nature of my research, and especially given my interest in beyond-academia, non-profit work, the time I have spent working with Swisspeace and with the Platform for European Memory and Conscience has been an invaluable opportunity to learn from two institutions that, as many others, establish the necessary groundwork for the creation of memory laws and public policies, as well as the foundation for the academic work around historical memory.
Tibisay Navarro-Mana is a PhD student in the Department of History and an HSPH minor.























