Staffs Uni professor appears in BBC Holocaust documentary

Report this content

A world-leading archaeologist from Staffordshire University will appear alongside Robert Rinder in the concluding episode of My Family, The Holocaust and Me next week.

In the two-part BBC series, Robert helps the second and third generations of three families who have experienced the Holocaust to discover the truth about what happened to their relatives. Robert also explores his own family’s Holocaust stories throughout the programme.

The first part of the moving documentary aired this week and Professor Caroline Sturdy Colls, Professor of Conflict Archaeology and Genocide Investigation, will feature in the final episode on Monday 16 November.

Professor Sturdy Colls is Director of Staffordshire University’s Centre of Archaeology which has pioneered Holocaust archaeology as a discipline by bringing together the expertise of technologists, social scientists, historians, and forensic archaeologists.

She explained: “I developed a unique non-invasive methodology which can help to create a very detailed and accurate picture of the crimes that were perpetrated.

“I’m very honoured and humbled to have worked with a number of Holocaust survivors, to have worked with their families and to have been given the responsibility of carrying out searches on their behalf. It is a real motivator behind continuing to do this work.”

For over a decade, the Centre has investigated historic crimes using forensic archaeology to shed new light on what happened at former camps and killing sites across Europe including in Poland, Serbia, Ukraine and Germany.

The team also investigated a Nazi SS camp constructed in secrecy on the British Channel Island of Alderney, which featured in a television documentary Adolf island  last year.

Professor Sturdy Colls added: “I’m committed to ensuring that we find new ways to educate people about the atrocities of the past because lot of these crimes are being repeated in the present.

“It was a privilege to take part in this documentary and to share some of our research with Robert. It is so important that we honour the memory of the victims of the Holocaust and continue to tell their stories.”

The final episode of My Family, The Holocaust and Me airs on BBC One at 9pm on Monday 16 November. Find more information and catch up with the first episode here.

Amy Platts

Media Communications Officer

t: 01782 292702

m: 07799 341911

e:
amy.platts@staffs.ac.uk

Staffordshire University is the Connected University; connected to the needs of students, academic partners, business and society. Our main city campus in Stoke-on-Trent features excellent learning and teaching facilities and good transport links. We have specialist Centres of Excellence in Healthcare Education at Stafford and Shrewsbury.  

We were recognised with a Gold award in the 2019 Teaching Excellence and Student Outcomes Framework (TEF) for delivering consistently outstanding teaching, learning and outcomes for students.  

We have been shortlisted for University of the Year at the THE Awards 2020 and were named ‘Midlands University of the Year’ at the Midlands Business Awards 2020. 
 
Staffordshire University has signed up to the Civic University Agreement, pledging to play a leading role in improving the regional economy and enhancing quality of life in local communities. We were recognised in the top 15 for social inclusion in The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2021. We aim to be a leading university for digital technologies building on our proud computing heritage and in 2019 launched Staffordshire University London’s Digital Institute which is committed to preparing students for careers in new and emerging tech industries. 

We are a Top 250 Young University (Times Higher Education Young University Rankings 2020) and are connected globally, with more than 11,000 people are studying Staffordshire University degrees overseas.

Subscribe

Media

Media