Podcast appearances and mentions of ruth barnett

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Best podcasts about ruth barnett

Latest podcast episodes about ruth barnett

We Didn't Start the Fire: The History Podcast
Eichmann (Part II) with Holocaust Survivor, Ruth Barnett

We Didn't Start the Fire: The History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2022 43:02


In this special second part of our Eichmann episodes, we speak to a Holocaust survivor about the horrors that Eichmann caused. Ruth Barnett was just 4 years old when she escaped Germany for England via the Kindertransport, because of her father's Jewish identity. She grew up between foster homes, in a strange country where she didn't know the language, as a person of no nationality. But despite it all, she still finds good and hope in the world. This week, we had the privilege of meeting Ruth and talking to her about her incredible life. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

We Didn't Start the Fire: The History Podcast

Adolf Eichmann was a Nazi bureaucrat. But the fact he's just a paper pusher,"doing his job", doesn't absolve him from his gruesome involvement in organising and enacting the Holocaust. And despite escaping the consequences by hiding under various false identities, he was finally captured by Mossad agents in Buenos Aires in 1960, leading to a televised trial which cemented the Holocaust in public consciousness. But how did it all happen? What exactly was his role? And how did he justify it to himself? This week, we're joined by Steven Luckert, Senior Program Curator in the Levine Institute for Holocaust Education at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC. This is Part I of our Eichmann episodes, and next week we'll be joined by Holocaust survivor Ruth Barnett for Part II. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Jewish News Podcast
42: Bristol University and social media outreach

The Jewish News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 42:04


Father and daughter Sarah Nyman and Graham Rubin open up about undergoing chemotherapy at the same time. Holocaust survivor Ruth Barnett on what she hopes to tell Boris Johnson ahead of the next Commons vote on the genocide amendment and Sabrina Miller on Bristol university's failure to address the concerns of Jewish students. We also speak to the Israeli foreign ministry's Yonatan Gonen about his team's efforts to reach to the the Arab world via social media.

The Yet Again Podcast
Episode #3 Ruth Barnett MBE: Reflections on Genocide and Racism

The Yet Again Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2021 29:35


In this episode, Joe Collins talks to Kindertransport survivor Ruth Barnett about her piece for Yet Again, in which Ruth reflects upon the human race's propensity for genocidal and racist behaviour. Edited by Katie Bovington

Channel History Hit
Survivors of Genocide

Channel History Hit

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 46:31


For Holocaust Memorial Day Dan talks to people who have experienced and survived genocide. Four guests from four different parts of the world. Sophie Masereka, Ruth Barnett, Kemal Pervanic, Sokphal Din all share their traumatic experiences. All of them lost their loved ones. All of them are brave enough to speak out, driven by the belief that memorialisation and education may stop the next genocide. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

survivors genocide ruth barnett
Das Gespräch | rbbKultur
Ruth Barnett - Kindertransportflüchtling

Das Gespräch | rbbKultur

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2019 42:17


Ruth Barnett ist eine der bekanntesten Kindertransport Flüchtlinge. Geboren wurde sie als Ruth Michaelis in Berlin. Aufgewachsen ist sie in Halensee, bis Mitte der 1930er Jahre die Familie auseinander gesprengt wurde. Sie wurde von der Mutter mit dem Kindertransport nach England gebracht, zusammen mit dem Bruder.

Old Mole Reading List
Girl In The River by Patricia Kullberg

Old Mole Reading List

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2019


It is with great pleasure that I talk with you this morning about a splendid novel by a good friend and fellow Old Mole, Patricia Kullberg. I’m not sure how this novel slipped by me in 2015, but it did. While at lunch with another Portland feminist and leftist, Johanna Brenner, in the course of our conversation Johanna asked, “Have you read Patsy’s novel?” No, I was ashamed to say, I had not, and could not really recall it ever being mentioned to me. The novel is Girl in the River, and besides being a rich historical novel about Portland and about the work of one particular Portland woman, it is a wonderfully told story.Since I knew Patricia had been a physician and Medical Director for Multnomah County Health Department, I expected her novel to be well researched and historically significant, what I did not quite expect was how totally captivating her story would be and how convincing and well fleshed out her characters are. Her main characters are Mabelline (a.k.a. Mae Rose), Mae’s dear friend Trudy, and Dr. Ruth Barnett. Although Patricia hastens to tell the reader that her characters are fictitious and the story a product of her imagination, there can be no doubt that Dr. Barnett is modeled on a real woman—a woman who helped hundreds of women terminate their pregnancies. For many years, Dr. Barnett maintained her clinic under a “longstanding arrangement between the legal establishment and the abortionists.. So long as no woman died, the law looked the other way…And no patient of Ruth Barnett’s had ever died. She was the best. Everyone knew it, from the mayor to the street sweeper.”Mae comes to know Dr. Barnett because she and Trudy are very sought after prostitutes who are very much a part of the high society of Portland, and Dr. Barnett is also a well known part of that ‘high society’. Mae’s mother ran a boarding house in a small town in Portland, and Mae is her do-everything helper; she helps in the kitchen, cleans the rooms and looks after her hard-working mother. When Mae’s mother, Lilly, dies quite young and unexpectedly, “a man with a pressed shirt and clean nails showed up at the Rose Home for Mill Hands and Lumberjacks. He’d come to take possession not of Mae, but of her home. He was from the bank and had papers to prove they owned it.” For a time she turns to a man she already knows for help;  “She went to live with Mr. Goshorn and his six striplings.” Fortunately for Mae she is able to extricate herself fairly quickly from that slave-like situation, and soon finds herself on the streets of Portland with no money and no real means of employment. She is soon arrested for vagrancy (the catch-all charge used to incarcerate the poor and jobless.” She finds herself in Rocky Butte jail without bail or any likelihood of freedom. Already an avid reader, she is hopeful when she hears that:Rocky Butte had a library. Mae, picturing the colossal, wood-paneled room of the library downtowns with stacks and stacks of books, had been excited until she surveyed what the jail had—five copies of the Holy Bible; two guides to reading it; several manuals on household crafts, half of which Mae could have written herself; a couple dozen novels like Little Little Women and Pollyanna; and several issues each of Dime Detective and Screen Book, dog-eared and torn up.Without giving up too much of the story, suffice it to say that Mae is eventually rescued by a woman named Trudy who admits to Mae that she is a prostitute and counsels her to avoid pimps at all costs, and suggests that Mae go into business with her (under the protection of a Madam). “…Mae decided maybe she didn’t mind the big bucks and being her own boss, the fun and the glamor. She liked being admired. She didn’t give a hoot about being loved. Not by a man.”Mae and Trudy have quite a good life together and genuinely love each other, though Trudy always seems to want more from Mae than she can honestly give. The descriptions Patricia Kullberg gives of Portland street life and the web of political and police corruption shine with authenticity, and she often quotes or paraphrases from news stories of the time, adding to the veracity of her story.Eventually, Mae wants out of prostitution, and she manages to talk Dr. Barnett into taking her on as an assistant. Certainly a big step down in income and in the luxuries of her daily life, but for the first time she has work that is deeply meaningful to her, and works for a woman she genuinely admires.This is a rich and wonderful story; once I started it, I read it up in two days and felt in its thrall for many weeks after. I don’t think I have done justice to the complexity of this tale nor the relationships that Mae has with both men and women. I will close by quoting from the epilogue:Ruth Barnett continued to perform abortions after she was arrested and her clinic shut down in 1951. She never turned a blind eye to a woman in trouble. She was repeatedly arrested and hauled into court, but did not exhaust her legal appeals until 1967. At the age of seventy-eight and suffering from malignant melanoma, she became the oldest woman ever sent to prison in Oregon. She was paroled five months later and died in 1969, less than four years before the landmark decision, Roe vs. Wade.Writing this book was obviously a labor of love for Patricia, and it has been a labor of love for me to read it. We can only hope she writes more fiction to go along with her many nonfiction articles and collaborations.I have been talking about Patricia Kullberg’s novel, Girl in the River. 

Back Porch Writer
Historical Fiction Author Patricia Kullberg Joins Kori on the Back Porch

Back Porch Writer

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2015 31:00


A family physician, Patricia Kullberg, MD, MPH, devoted her career to serving persons living with physical, mental and addiction disorders at a clinic for the homeless. She has written many award-winning articles about health and medicine, but Girl in the River is her first novel. Kullberg and her husband live in Portland, Oregon, where she facilitates writing workshops for marginalized women and tends a large garden. Book blurb: On the eve of World War II, Portland, Oregon, battles corruption as the city falls into the hands of gangsters. Newly orphaned, Mae Rose wanders the rain-stained streets alone, on the lam from a knife-wielding pimp and mustering her own worst impulses to survive. As Mae rises to power in Portland’s gritty sex industry, she’s pursued by a district attorney who seeks to snare her for more personal reasons.  In the city’s smoky nightspots, the glamorous Dr. Ruth Barnett turns heads, but by day she operates a wildly successful abortion service. At war’s end, both Mae and Ruth are caught in the crosshairs of Portland’s anti-vice crusade. The women’s survival, as well as any chance at lasting love, depends on their allegiance to each other and their abilities to outsmart the cops and politicians who no longer protect them.  

The PRovoke Podcast
SwiftKey's Ruth Barnett on Twitter, data privacy, native advertising and new media models.

The PRovoke Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2014 34:34


Ruth Barnett is VP of global communications at British startup SwiftKey, an app that helps improve mobile typing. Before joining SwiftKey, she was the media's first 'Twitter correspondent' at Sky News, where she put social media at the heart of the channel's newsroom. In an Echo Chamber interview with Arun Sudhaman, she discusses how the media has got to grips with digital channels, the slow fade of traditional publishing models, and the concerns over data privacy that affect companies like SwiftKey.

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPod/iPhone
Is citizenship nationality?

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPod/iPhone

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2010 2:38


You may think you have a right to your nationality and that the state will protect you, however, we hear from Ruth Barnett, a Jewish refugee, and Moazzam Begg, an ex-Guantanamo detainee, about the stark realities.

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPod/iPhone
Transcript -- Is citizenship nationality?

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPod/iPhone

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2010


Transcript -- You may think you have a right to your nationality and that the state will protect you, however, we hear from Ruth Barnett, a Jewish refugee, and Moazzam Begg, an ex-Guantanamo detainee, about the stark realities.

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPad/Mac/PC
Is citizenship nationality?

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPad/Mac/PC

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2010 2:38


You may think you have a right to your nationality and that the state will protect you, however, we hear from Ruth Barnett, a Jewish refugee, and Moazzam Begg, an ex-Guantanamo detainee, about the stark realities.

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPad/Mac/PC
Transcript -- Is citizenship nationality?

Is citizenship nationality? - for iPad/Mac/PC

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2010


Transcript -- You may think you have a right to your nationality and that the state will protect you, however, we hear from Ruth Barnett, a Jewish refugee, and Moazzam Begg, an ex-Guantanamo detainee, about the stark realities.