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(January 24, 2008 - Jerusalem) Marking the launch of Yad
Vashem’s Arabic website about the Holocaust, Yad Vashem
commissioned a poll, examining the level of interest among
Arabic speakers in Israel on the subject. The results of the
survey were presented by Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev at
an event marking the launch of the site today: more than
two-thirds (some 70%) of the adult Arab population knew about
the Holocaust; of them, some 60% had heard about it for the
first time at school, and 27% through the media. Additionally,
the survey revealed that 58% of the Israeli Arab sector
believe that there is a need to teach about the Holocaust in
school; this number rises among the younger population (under
age 24) - 64% of this group would like to see the subject on
the school curriculum. Of those who believed that the
Holocaust should be taught in school, 40% reasoned “it is part
of world history,” 30% believe “it touches the history of the
people living beside us,” and 28% said “it has a valuable
implication for every human being.”
The
survey also disclosed that one out of every three Arabic
speakers in Israel were interested in visiting a website with
information about the Holocaust in Arabic - equaling 40% of
all web-surfers in the Israeli Arab sector. (The survey was
carried out by Smith Consulting on 15-16 January 2008 among
512 people representing the adult Israeli Arab population,
with a 4.5% margin of error.)
“The
relatively high percentage of Arabic speakers in Israel that
has heard about the Holocaust, and the fact that 40% of them
said they would visit a website with information about the
Holocaust, reinforces the need to provide information on the
subject in Arabic, in addition to increasing teaching about
the Holocaust in schools. An encouraging finding from the
survey is that the interest and willingness to learn more
about the Holocaust is higher among younger adults in the
Israeli Arab sector. The survey also revealed that in 89,000
Arab households there are potential surfers of the Yad Vashem
website - this is an important audience that will join the
millions of Arabic speakers around the world who will now be
able to receive information on the Holocaust in their own
language,” said Shalev.
Results of the survey were presented today at a special event
at Yad Vashem marking the launch of the Arabic website. At the
event, a special greeting (in Arabic) recorded by Prince El
Hassan bin Talal of Jordan was broadcast, in which he said,
“This educational website on the Holocaust in the Arabic
language presents a unique opportunity to learn about and
understand the issues which are not only of historical import,
but are also vital to our lives today."
Holocaust survivor Dina Beitler, whose filmed testimony, with
Arabic subtitles, is part of the new website, spoke
emotionally at the event, at one point breaking into tears,
“Holocaust denial in various countries exists, and so it is
important that people see us, the Holocaust survivors, that
they’ll listen to our testimonies, and learn the legacy of the
Holocaust - also in Arabic.”
Minister of Science, Culture and Sport Raleb Majadele
remarked: “The Internet is difficult to block with barriers of
censorship and hate. From now on, also Arabic speakers will be
able to learn the truth about the Holocaust.”
The
launch event included a panel discussion on “The Holocaust and
the Arab World” moderated by journalist Smadar Perry (Yediot
Achronot). The panel included Yad Vashem Chairman Avner Shalev,
Dr. Meir Litvak of Tel Aviv University, and journalist Nazir
Majali (Ashraq Alawsat).
The
Arabic website, accessible from Yad Vashem’s website at <http://www.yadvashem.org>,
includes the historical narrative of the Holocaust, concepts
from the Holocaust, academic articles, artifacts, maps,
photos, archival documents and an online video testimony
resource center all translated into Arabic, as well as a
special multimedia presentation of the Auschwitz Album, with
Arabic narration, stories of Righteous Among the Nations -
including Muslims from Turkey and Albania - and the movie We
Were There, which documents a joint visit of Arabs and Jews to
Auschwitz. The site also contains information on the study of
Arabic in Theresienstadt, and the Yad Vashem exhibit, “Besa -
A Code of Honor: Muslim Albanians who Rescued Jews during the
Holocaust.” The website was made possible thanks to the
generous donation of Stuart Golvin and Ilene Golvin of Canada.
In
2007, nearly 7 million people, from more than 200 countries,
visited Yad Vashem’s website, with some 56,000 from Muslim
countries, including 32,500 visitors Arabic speaking
countries.
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