HONORARY CHAIRMAN:
Eli Wiesel

PRESIDENT:
Helene Bass-Wichelhaus, Ph.D.

VICE-PRESIDENTS:
Janet Kestenberg Amighi, Ph.D.
Eva Fogelman, Ph.D.
K. Mark Sossin, Ph.D.

SECRETARY:
Lynne Leavy, MSW

TREASURER:
K. Mark Sossin, Ph.D.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
Claire Boren, MSW
Ira Brenner, M.D.
Susan Charney, MSW
Joan Erdheim, Ph.D.
Mallory Factor
Joseph Glick, Ph.D.
Stephen Greenwald, Esq.
Marianne Lester, Ph.D.
Jeremy Mack, M.D.
Robert Prince, Ph.D.
Sarah Sternklar, Ph.D.
Steven Strauss
Bernard Weber

PROJECT DIRECTORS:

International Study of Organized Persecution of Children (ISOPC):
Eva Fogelman, Ph.D.
Helene Bass-Wichelhaus, Ph.D.
Kestenberg Movement Profile (KMP):
Janet Kestenberg Amighi, Ph.D.
K. Mark Sossin, Ph.D.

GROSS BREESEN:
Steven Strauss

FINANCIAL ADVISORS:
Roy Herbert
Judith Kasen, CFA

ADMINISTRATOR:
Annabella B. Nelkin

EXECUTIVE ASSISTANTS:
Nancy Lopez
Grace Morrocu

FOUNDER:
Judith S. Kestenberg, M.D.

About CDR

Mission:

Child Development Research is dedicated to restoring and preserving the mental health of children especially those who have suffered under the extreme trauma of organized persecution. This includes documenting patterns of normal child development and the disruptions, distortions, and adaptations which occur during and in the aftermath of trauma. The organization is dedicated to discovering and promulgating approaches which can ameliorate the long term effects on victims of past, present, and future mass dehumanizations. One of our points of focus will be the nonverbal expressions of normal and disrupted child development.

This is to be accomplished by a professional staff with the strong support of volunteers, survivors, community resources, and collaboration with other Holocaust related groups and educational organizations.

Goals:

To develop and support projects which further normal child development and aim at prevention of childhood disorders particularly those associated with extreme trauma.

To conduct interdisciplinary, comparative studies of child development both under "normal" and extreme conditions.

To validate non-verbal techniques of assessment of personality and treatment of mental health disorders.

To continue our world-wide efforts to seek out and interview those child survivors of the Nazi Holocaust and later persecutions of children who have been silent To continue to systematically analyze the patterns of persecution of children under the Nazis, to assess the adaptation of children to extreme trauma, and to understand modes of recovery in the aftermath.

To collaborate with and train mental health professionals who are treating child survivors of trauma and their families.

To encourage and organize creative endeavors of child survivors in the visual and performing arts, writing of poetry, literature, memoirs and public speaking.

To compile and publish a comprehensive history of the persecution of children during the Nazi era.

To assist educators in the teaching about the history of persecution of children during the Nazi era and other periods of child persecution.

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