The Claims Conference welcomes your application for funding to support Holocaust research, education, and documentation programs. Our mission includes advancing and deepening knowledge of the Shoah through rigorous research, educational initiatives, and documentation efforts.
Please review the Claims Conference Values Statement. All grantees are asked to affirm their organization’s alignment with and their commitment to uphold these principles, as a condition of receiving funding.
Grant period: Begins no earlier than January of the following year
Applications must be submitted via Fluxx (English only)
Application Portal opens approximately 6 weeks before deadline
Review process takes approximately 8 months
Applicants are strongly encouraged to begin the application process early, allowing adequate time to thoughtfully develop the proposal, complete all required components, and resolve any technical issues in advance of the submission deadline.
A strong evaluation component is required for all funded projects. Applicants must describe how they will measure outcomes, document results, and apply findings to strengthen project quality and impact.
Evaluation plans should include:
Clear goals and measurable objectives aligned with the project’s target audiences
Methods and tools used to assess outcomes (e.g., pre/post assessments, surveys, interviews, observation, analytics, or qualitative feedback)
A timeline for data collection and analysis during and after the grant period
A plan for reporting findings and using results to improve future work
Education programs, including educator training, should include measurable outcomes related to:
Participant understanding of the Holocaust’s antecedents, including the history of antisemitism
Increased capacity to identify and counter Holocaust denial, distortion, and trivialization, including Holocaust inversion
Demonstrable changes in teaching practice, institutional engagement, or audience reach—especially for young adults and multipliers
Evidence of learning transfer (e.g., classroom implementation, institutional adoption, professional dissemination, or follow-up activities)
Projects and areas that the Claims Conference does NOT fund include:
Fine arts projects, such as art exhibitions, music performances, and theater arts
Research projects, fictional literature and personal memoirs submitted by individuals
Commemoration and memorial ceremonies, monuments, memorial sites
Cemetery preservation or restoration
Capital projects
Conferences, except those of unique and exceptional merit
Scholarships for individuals (outside of the Claims Conference Kagan Fellowship program)
Pre-service teacher training
Educator training programs that are one day or less
College or university courses (unless it is within the framework of the University Partnership Program)
Student or community-based trips to Holocaust-related sites in Europe or Israel
Individual school programs or assemblies
Development of new curricular materials unless there is a demonstrated need or of unique and exceptional merit
Operational costs of institutions, endowments or underwriting deficits