Simon Schama standing between the fencing at Auschwitz Concentration Camp, landscape.

Caption

Simon Schama standing between the fencing at Auschwitz Concentration Camp, landscape.

Credit: Oxford Films

Next week, historian Simon Schama examines the Holocaust and its impact 80 years after the liberation of Auschwitz. Take a look at what’s coming up!

A rocky shore.

View Finders: Golden Isles - Monday, April 21 at 9:30 PM

Chris and Paul head to the idyllic Golden Isles to photograph St. Simons Island and Jekyll Island. In the process, they met with experts who talked about the history and ecology of the region.

Single-Use Planet - Monday, April 21 at 10 PM

Plastic is vital to our modern way of life—but not all forms of it. In search of why more single-use plastic debris enters the ocean each year despite all recycling efforts, Single-Use Planet goes upstream in the U.S. to where millions of tons of raw plastic are being made with generous government support. How have other countries solved for the pollution? 

Water for Life - Monday, April 21 at 11 PM

Meet three Latin American community leaders who risked their lives to resist government and corporate plans to divert critical local water resources to mining and hydroelectric projects.

Simon Schama: The Holocaust, 80 Years On - Tuesday, April 22 at 10 PM

Renowned historian Simon Schama, a lifelong documenter of Jewish history, examines the Holocaust as a worldwide crime and its lasting impact today, 80 years after the liberation of Auschwitz, in this deeply personal film.

An Alaskan village.

FRONTLINE: Alaska’s Vanishing Native Villages - Tuesday, April 22 at 10 PM

Alaska Native villages fighting for survival against climate change. With the Howard Center at ASU, why communities are relocating, and struggling to preserve their traditions. Also: an investigation into Russian atrocities in Bucha, Ukraine.

Changing Planet: River Restoration - Wednesday, April 23 at 10 PM

Explore the planet’s most threatened ecosystems. Follow Dr. M. Sanjayan on a visit to northern California where the largest river restoration project in US history is aiming to bring life back to a sacred river.