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Remembering the Holocaust and
Combating Xenophobia on January 27th
Ages: Junior and
Senior High School Students Introduction
Although several European governments have instituted an annual Holocaust Day of Remembrance, racism, antisemitism and xenophobia have not abated. Clearly, as indicated in a recent European Union commissioned report, antisemitism has dramatically risen in many European countries. In an effort to promote Holocaust awareness, as well as to foster consciousness about the dangerous rise of antisemitism in Europe, the International School for Holocaust Studies at Yad Vashem has developed this classroom activity for junior and senior high school students about the racial, antisemitic discrimination of Jewish children during the Holocaust and its contemporary connections. Background
On November 15, 1938, Jewish children were officially banned from German schools. This law, promulgated after Kristallnacht (the Night of Broken Glass) expelled Jewish pupils from the general education system, even where special classes for Jews existed. Even before the official ban, many children had switched from public schools to Jewish schools because of the antisemitic climate and harassment on the part of non-Jewish teachers and students. Classroom Activity and Discussion Questions
After looking carefully at the above illustration, read the
following testimonies of Jewish pupils, Rosemarie Moskin, who was
fourteen years old, and Moshe Sandberg (Sanbar), who was seventeen years old, recounting their experiences in school. Moshe
Sandberg/Sanbar
Source material taken from: I. B. Tatelbaum, Through Our Eyes: Children Witness the Holocaust (Yad Vashem: Jerusalem, 2004).
Discussion Questions
Contemporary Connections
However, in several European countries, Jewish pupils and their families have recently been the victims of violent antisemitic attacks. Synagogues have been burned, Jewish cemeteries have been desecrated with swastikas, and walls in Jewish neighborhoods have been defaced with graffiti calling for “Death to Jews” and “Jews to Gas Chambers.” In summer 2005, Jewish cemeteries across the European continent have been vandalized. For instance, in Budapest approximately 130 graves were desecrated. In the East London district of West Ham, 90 headstones were vandalized. In Prestwich near North Manchester, 96 Jewish graves were smashed, and in Kazan, the capital of Tatarstan, vandals spray-painted red swastikas on 26 tombstones in the local Jewish cemetery.
Discussion Questions and
Suggested Activities Antisemitic slurs such as, “Burn in the Oven, Jews”, refer to the crematoria that were built at Auschwitz and other Nazi camps during the Holocaust. On the 27th of January, the day on which we mark the liberation of Auschwitz, we must honor not only the memory of human beings who were murdered simply because of their race, but we must also confront how the Holocaust has become part of contemporary antisemitic slogans and strongly combat antisemitism in our midst. By fighting contemporary antisemitism and other forms of xenophobia in our respective schools, we safeguard Holocaust memory and thereby put its universal lessons into practice. |
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