Entrance to Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp
The ECHO Project

From Memory
to Action.

A four-year journey shaping how the next generation understands history—and their responsibility within it.

Holocaust education cannot be brief, symbolic, or optional. It must be structured, serious, and continuous.

About ECHO

Why ECHO
Exists

Most students encounter the Holocaust only briefly—without depth, without context, and without understanding its relevance today.

At the same time, distortion, antisemitism, and indifference are rising. The gap between what students learn and what they need to understand has never been wider.

ECHO was created to respond to this gap—not symbolically, but structurally.

01

Structured Education

A multi-year program that builds knowledge with clarity and depth — not a single lesson, but a sustained commitment.

02

Experiential Learning

Immersive experiences — including travel to sites of memory — that connect history to real human stories.

03

Leadership Development

Students grow into leaders who inspire and guide others, carrying the lessons forward.

04

Lasting Impact

Knowledge carried forward into schools, communities, and future generations.

Our Program

A 4-Year Journey

A progressive model aligned with students' development throughout high school — each year building on the last.

Our Impact

What We Aim to Build

Informed Students

Who think critically, speak with knowledge, and act with responsibility.

Engaged Schools

With sustained, high-quality programs that go beyond a single lesson.

Stronger Communities

More resilient against hatred, distortion, and extremism.

View Our Impact
Beyond ECHO

A Lifelong Network

University & Network Track

Partnerships, exchanges, and access to networks in education, policy, and civil society.

Addressing Antisemitism

Understanding today's narratives, misinformation, and how to respond effectively.

Explore Beyond ECHO
Background
Get Involved

What begins with learning
does not end there.

It continues through leadership, engagement, and transmission.
That is how memory is preserved.