
As ESHEM has not yet welcomed its first members, this section presents examples of good practices drawn from initiatives outside the network. While not eligible for membership, these projects are relevant to the values and methods that inspire ESHEM.
Over time, this section will expand to feature practices from ESHEM members and new initiatives emerging across Europe.
We use the term “good practices” rather than “best practices” to emphasise that meaningful work with Holocaust memory is context-specific, reflective, and evolving, not bound by fixed standards and a one-size-fits-all approach. These examples illustrate creative, ethical, and collaborative approaches to engaging with remembrance and education.
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Practices (6)
RSS
A digital mapping and storytelling project tracing the spatial boundaries, institutions, and daily lives of people in the Lviv Ghetto during the Holocaust.
- Project locations
- Ukraine
An annual Europe-wide initiative engaging Roma and non-Roma youth in commemorating the Roma Genocide on August 2 through education and remembrance activities.
- Project locations
- Belgium

Youth create neighbourhood performances inspired by WWII witnesses and local history, guided by theatre professionals.
- Project locations
- Netherlands

A remembrance initiative linking Stolpersteine to stories, archives, and testimonies in a shared digital collection across Europe.
- Project locations
- Netherlands

A digital platform on the Holocaust in Croatia, offering maps, primary sources, and continually updated materials.
- Project locations
- Croatia

A project that catalogs and publishes Nazi deportation photos from 1938–1945 in a growing digital atlas intended for research, education, and remembrance.
- Project locations
- Germany