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Education - Bensalem Township

BCCC Presents “The Forgotten Girls’ of the Holocaust”

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This still image is from the documentary “999: The Forgotten Girls” about the first Jewish transport to Auschwitz.  (PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of the Grosman family)

Director Heather Dune Macadam screens her award-winning documentary,The Forgotten Girls’ of the Holocaust” in the Zlock Performing Arts Center at the Bucks County Community College (BCCC) Newtown Campus.

Edith Grosman was seventeen when Slovak officials ordered unmarried Jewish girls to register for work service. Filled with a sense of national pride, she joined hundreds of other innocent young women who were under the false impression their patriotic duty would benefit their families. Instead, they were deported to Auschwitz as expendable slave labor.

Edith Grosman is among those who tell their incredible stories of surviving the Holocaust in the award-winning documentary “999: The Forgotten Girls.” (Submitted by BCCC)

Grosman and others tell their incredible stories of survival first-hand in the award-winning documentary “999: The Forgotten Girls,” coming to BCCC at 6 p.m. Thursday, March 26. The free screening, supported by a Mark Schonwetter Foundation Grant, is presented by the College’s School of Social and Behavioral Science and the Holocaust and Genocide Studies certificate program, includes a question-and-answer session with Macadam.

The Slovak government paid the Nazis the equivalent of $3,000 to deport each girl. Through first-person testimony and rare archival material, we learn the little-known facts of the women’s camp in 1942 and how a handful of the girls managed against all odds to survive over three long years of hell on earth.

“Too many stories — especially those of young women — remain untold or overlooked,” said Paula Raimondo, Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies. “The first transport of Jewish girls from Slovakia to Auschwitz is not widely known, yet it reveals so much about deception, state complicity, gendered persecution, and resilience. When we bring these histories into the light, we not only honor the victims and survivors, we challenge ourselves to confront the systems that made such atrocities possible.”

Edie Valo (left) and Ella Rutman (right), photographed with friends in 1941, were part of the first transport of Jewish women to Auschwitz. Their stories are told in the documentary “999: The Forgotten Girls” (PHOTO CREDIT: Courtesy of the Rutman family)

Macadam spent over 20 years researching and interviewing families, witnesses, and survivors of the first official transport to Auschwitz. Her internationally acclaimed book “999: The Extraordinary Young Women of the First Official Jewish Transport to Auschwitz” (published in 2020), on which the film is based, has been translated into 18 languages and was a PEN Finalist in 2021. The film was honored with the Human Rights Award at the Hamptons Documentary Fest, Best Documentary at the Miami Jewish Film Festival Audience Award, and as an official selection of the New York Jewish Film Festival.

Heather Dune Macadam, director, producer, and author, comes to Bucks County Community College March 26 to screen her award-winning documentary “999: The Forgotten Girls” about the first official transport of young Jewish women to Auschwitz. A Q&A will follow the film, presented by the School of Social and Behavioral Science and the Holocaust and Genocide Studies certificate program. (PHOTO CREDIT: Keith Barraclough)

“I am especially thrilled to offer this event in conjunction with our spring Rescue and Resistance course, in which students spend the semester examining moral courage, defiance, and survival under unimaginable circumstances,” added Raimondo. “Hearing this story — grounded in first-person testimony and Heather’s years of research — deepens that study in a profound way. It reminds us that resistance took many forms, including the daily, determined will to survive.”

Click here for a campus map and directions

To learn more about the College’s Holocaust and Genocide Studies certificate program, contact the School of Social and Behavioral Science at sb@bucks.edu or 215-968-8270.

Education - Bensalem Township

Bucks County St Patrick’s Day Parade is Set for Saturday in Levittown

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The date and time is set for the 2026 St. Patrick’s Day Parade celebrating Irish culture in Levittown scheduled to take place Saturday March 14 beginning at 10:30 a.m.

The parade kicks on from Conwell Egan Catholic High School and ends at New Falls Road in Levittown.

The 2026 Bucks County St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee has selected Jeff Sproehnle as Grand Marshal for this years parade. Sproehnle is a  39-year veteran of the Middletown Township Police Department. Prior to his retirement in 2011, he rose to the rank of Detective and managed many notable cases serving residents of Middletown Township and Bucks County.

Credit: Submitted

A long-time member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH), Sproehnle served as Division 1 President for eight years, stepping down in 2025. He has been instrumental in supporting fundraising efforts such as the Hibernian Hunger Project and initiatives benefiting veterans in need.

 

 

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Education - Bensalem Township

Youthful Creativity Shines at 31st Annual High School Art Exhibition

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Crowds like this one last year are expected to visit the 31st Annual High School Art Exhibition at BCCC’s Hicks Art Center Gallery. The show also includes a Congressional Art Competition.   PHOTO CREDIT: Mel Evans

Which Bucks County high school student will have the honor of their artwork being displayed in the Cannon Tunnel of the U.S. Capitol for a year?

Bucks County Community College (BCCC)  invites the public to the 31st Annual High School Art Exhibition March 18 – April 5 in the Hicks Art Center Gallery, including an awards ceremony and reception on Sunday, March 29.

High school art teachers have selected their students’ best work for the exhibition, and for submission to the Congressional Art Competition, held in every congressional district each spring. The first-place winning artwork will be sent to Washington, D.C., to be displayed in the corridors of the Cannon Tunnel of the U.S. Capitol for a year, representing Pennsylvania’s 1st Congressional District.

Clifford Eberly, the College’s senior manager of galleries and exhibitions, says the show is an opportunity to see youthful ingenuity flourish.

“Now in my fifth year of working with high school instructors and their students for this annual exhibition, I have seen the breadth of astounding creativity from the county’s young artists, and it is truly inspiring,” said Eberly. “It is important for us to foster art and culture in our region while promoting the legacy of Bucks as a vital source of creative education.”

Submitted: BCCC

Isabel Steiner from Council Rock High School North won the 2025 1st Congressional District High School Art Competition for “The Attic” (graphite on paper, 2024), which has been displayed in the Cannon Tunnel of the U.S. Capitol for the past year.

This year, the 31st Annual High School Art Exhibition and Congressional Art Competition takes place from March 18 – April 5 at BCCC’s Hicks Art Center Gallery. A reception and ceremony will be held on March 29 from 12:30-3p p.m. in room 100, featuring an awards ceremony at 1 p.m. presented by Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick (R-01), who will announce the winning entry. The reception features free refreshments and an opportunity to meet the young artists and their instructors.

The Hicks Art Center Gallery is located on the campus at 275 Swamp Road in Newtown. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and noon – 4 p.m. Saturday. The gallery is also open Sunday, March 29, from 12:30 – 3 p.m. for the reception and awards ceremony.

All events are free and open to the public. To learn more, email gallery@bucks.edu, call 215-968-8432 or click here to view online.

A visitor snaps a picture of a painting at last year’s High School Art Exhibition in the Hicks Art Center Gallery at BCCC.  PHOTO CREDIT: Mel Evans

 

 

 

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Education - Bensalem Township

Lower Bucks Public Schools Delay Tuesday’s Start Times

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Lower Bucks County public school districts announced their plans for today March 3 2026 as schools are OPEN but on delay.

Below is a list of the schools and their websites. All are encouraged to use the links to see the complete details of your school district.

Bensalem School District  –  Two Hour Delay 3/3/26

Click here for updates and full details on Bensalem School District’s website.

Bristol Borough School District – 2 Hour Delay 3/3/26

Click here for updates and full details on Bristol Borough School District’s website.

Bristol Township School District Two-Hour Delayed Opening March 3

Click here for updates and full details on Bristol Township School District’s website.

Bucks County Technical High School  – 3/3/2026 Two Hour Delay

Click here for updates and full details on Bucks County Technical School’s website.

Morrisville Borough School District – 2 Hour Delay 3/3/26

Click here for updates and full details on Morrisville Borough School District’s website.

Neshaminy School District – 3/3/2026 Two Hour Delay

Click here for updates and full details on Neshaminy School District’s website.

Pennsbury School District – 2 Hour Delay 3/3/26

Click here for updates and full details on Pennsbury School District’s website.

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