This e-newsletter features new lesson
plans on two themes that at first glance may seem unconnected. One
lesson plan focuses on the Japanese diplomat
Sempo (Chiune) Sugihara. During the Second World War, he helped
more than a thousand Jews receiving the recognition of Yad Vashem as
a Righteous among the Nations. A professional diplomat of Japan
operating out of distant Lithuania, he displayed precisely the
qualities that we would like to instill in the young people of
today’s world – a humane involvement in saving people, using the
means at his disposal to ameliorate the fates of thousands despite
the personal danger he faced. He in fact paid dearly after the war
by being dismissed from the Japanese Foreign Service. Let it be
stated that even amongst diplomats in Europe, he was in a small
minority.
We also introduce three age-specific
lesson plans on a second theme. These lesson plans present ideas
connected with the importance of collecting Pages of Testimony by
Yad Vashem that memorialize Jewish victims of the Holocaust.
They also involve the pupil directly
with survivors and thus create an active connection between younger
and older people in the community. The two themes are clearly
different. However, the pupils involvement in collecting names and
restoring the memory of victims through their life stories can be
seen as preserving the legacy of Sugihara’s brave actions during the
Holocaust. Clearly, this Japanese diplomat saved whom he could and
the pupils of today will, in essence, be involved in saving the
memory of those who were murdered. The Pages they collect will
become the symbolic tombstones of the victims. They will join the
other 3.2 million Pages of Testimony already collected in Yad
Vashem’s Hall of Names. These documents will be part of an 11th hour
campaign to collect these testimonies from the aging generation of
survivors.
The first subject explores historical
events that unfolded more than sixty-five years ago, focusing on the
response of one individual who dared to rescue. The second is a
suggestion in real-time for pupils to gather as much information as
possible from survivors about family members or friends whom they
knew before the war and were murdered by the Nazis and their
collaborators. The first lesson plan examines historical events,
whereas the others look forward in an attempt to collect information
by young people who learning about their own history.
An underlying theme in all of these
lesson plans is the power of every individual person. Sixty-five
years ago the vast majority of bystanders were apathetic toward the
plight of Jews. In addition, most world governments, including
democratic regimes where freedom of speech and religion was part of
their national constitutions, developed policies of appeasement.
In contrast, these lesson plans enable
teachers to work with pupils on historical events related to the
Holocaust, while linking them to contemporary ethical values and
social awareness.
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