Agnieszka Jabłońska is a manager, political scientist, memory activist, independent researcher, graduate of the Center for Jewish Studies in Heidelberg and of Political Science at the University of Wrocław. She has worked with the Israeli-Palestinian educational organization MEET – The Middle East Entrepreneurs of Tomorrow. Former event producer at the agency DDMC in Brussels where she also developed communication strategies. She is the co-founder and executive director of the Urban Memory Foundation in Wrocław (part of the Engaged Memory Consortium – EMC), which focuses on public history and memory studies.
Aleksandra Janus is an anthropologist, researcher, a graduate of doctoral studies at the Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology at the Jagiellonian University. She is co-author of the initiatives Museum Lab and Museums for Climate, director of the Centrum Cyfrowe Foundation, and head of its Open Culture Studio. She is also a curator of the Exercising Modernity program, president of the Zapomniane Foundation (part of the Engaged Memory Consortium – EMC), which focuses on locating and identifying forgotten and unmarked graves of Holocaust victims, and director of the European Sites of Holocaust Memory (ESHEM) project.
Aleksandra Kumala is a cultural studies scholar, PhD in the humanities, and an independent researcher. She is the head of research at FestivALT Association and research and documentation officer for the European Sites of Holocaust Memory (ESHEM) project. She is also a member of the Research Center for Memory Cultures at the Faculty of Polish Studies, Jagiellonian University, and of the international network Thinking Through the Museum.
Lena Rubenfeld Koralewska is a project manager, social entrepreneur, and cultural activist. Initiator and member of various Jewish startups. She is the co-founder and artistic director of FestivALT Association (part of the Engaged Memory Consortium – EMC), program coordinator for Limmud Europe, and network engagement officer in the European Sites of Holocaust Memory (ESHEM) project.
Agata Strządała is a cultural studies scholar, PhD in the humanities, specializing in ethics and the history of scientific research and medical practices, as well as intercultural communication and bioethics. She earned her doctorate with distinction from the University of Wrocław and currently works as an assistant professor at the Wrocław Medical University. Member of the Local Ethics Committee for Animal Experimentation and Ambassador of the Magna Charta Universitatum. Author of the monograph “From Galton to Watson: Transformations in the Understanding of Eugenics in the 19th and 20th Centuries.” She cooperates with the Urban Memory Foundation and EMC.