From NBC News:
“Survey finds 'shocking' lack
of Holocaust knowledge among millennials and Gen Z”
A nationwide survey released
Wednesday shows a "worrying lack of basic Holocaust knowledge" among
adults under 40, including over 1 in 10 respondents who did not recall ever
having heard the word "Holocaust" before. The survey, touted as the
first 50-state survey of Holocaust knowledge among millennials and Generation
Z, showed that many respondents were unclear about the basic facts of the
genocide. Sixty-three percent of those surveyed did not know that 6 million
Jews were murdered in the Holocaust, and over half of those thought the death
toll was fewer than 2 million. Over 40,000 concentration camps and ghettos were
established during World War II, but nearly half of U.S. respondents could not
name a single one. "The most important lesson is that we can't lose any
more time," said Greg Schneider, executive vice president of the
Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, which commissioned the
study. "If we let these trends continue for another generation, the
crucial lessons from this terrible part of history could be lost."
The Holocaust was the
state-sponsored mass persecution and murder of millions of people under the
Nazi regime and its collaborators. The genocide campaign targeted groups
believed by Adolf Hitler's government to be biologically inferior because of
anti-Semitism, homophobia or the like. Using tactics like gas wagons,
concentration camps and firing squads, the regime targeted the Jewish people in
particular for annihilation and killed nearly 2 of every 3 European Jews by
1945.
The lack of Holocaust knowledge
demonstrated in the study is "shocking" and "saddening,"
said the Claims Conference, a nonprofit that works to secure material
compensation for Holocaust survivors. The survey's data came from 11,000
interviews across the country, conducted by phone and online with a random,
demographically representative sample of respondents ages 18 to 39. It was led
by a task force that included Holocaust survivors, historians and experts from
museums, educational institutions and nonprofits. The findings raise concerns
not just about Holocaust ignorance, but also about Holocaust denial. Just 90
percent of respondents said they believed that the Holocaust happened. Seven
percent were not sure, and 3 percent denied that it happened. One of the most
disturbing revelations, the survey noted, is that 11 percent of respondents believe
Jews caused the Holocaust. The number climbs to 19 percent in New York, the
state with the largest Jewish population. "There is no doubt that
Holocaust denial is a form of anti-Semitism," said Deborah Lipstadt, a
professor of modern Jewish history and Holocaust studies at Emory University in
Atlanta. "And when we fail to actively remember the facts of what
happened, we risk a situation where prejudice and anti-Semitism will encroach
on those facts."
Part of the problem may be social
media, experts say. The survey shows that about half of millennial and Gen Z
respondents have seen Holocaust denial or distortion posts online. Fifty-six
percent reported having seen Nazi symbols on social media or in their
communities within the past five years. The findings come on the heels of the
Claims Conference's #NoDenyingIt digital campaign, which used photos and videos
of Holocaust survivors to appeal directly to Facebook to remove Holocaust
denial posts. Facebook's Community Standards prohibit hate speech but do not
consider Holocaust denial part of that category, despite opposite messaging
from other institutions, like Congress and the State Department. "We take
down any post that celebrates, defends, or attempts to justify the
Holocaust," a Facebook spokesperson said in an email. "The same goes
for any content that mocks Holocaust victims, accuses victims of lying about
the atrocities, spews hate, or advocates for violence against Jewish people in
any way."
In countries where Holocaust
denial is illegal, such as Germany, France and Poland, Facebook takes steps to
restrict access in accordance with the law, the spokesperson said. "We
know many people strongly disagree with our position — and we respect
that," the spokesperson said. "It's really important for us to engage
on these issues and hear from people to understand their concerns. We have a
team that is dedicated to developing and reviewing our policies and we welcome
collaboration with industry, experts and other groups to ensure we're getting
it right." The social media debate is part of a larger reckoning over the
Holocaust's place in American memory. With fewer living Holocaust survivors who
can serve as eyewitnesses to the genocide and with a new wave of anti-Semitism
in the U.S. and Europe, some worry that the seven-decade rallying cry
"never forget" is being forgotten. Disturbingly, the majority of
adults in the poll believed that something like the Holocaust could happen
again, the survey found. "When you learn the history of the Holocaust, you
are not simply learning about the past," Lipstadt said. "These
lessons remain relevant today in order to understand not only anti-Semitism,
but also all the other 'isms' of society. There is real danger to letting them
fade."
While most respondents first
learned about the Holocaust in school, the survey's findings suggest that
education may be incomplete. The Holocaust is associated with World War II, but
22 percent of respondents thought it was associated with World War I. Ten
percent were not sure, 5 percent said the Civil War, and 3 percent said the
Vietnam War. Certain states mandate Holocaust education in school, and the
majority of survey participants said the subject should be compulsory. But
there was not a direct correlation between states that mandate Holocaust education
and positive survey results, Schneider said. Respondents in Wisconsin,
Minnesota and Massachusetts ranked highest in Holocaust knowledge, even though
those states do not require Holocaust education, according to the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum. Respondents in New York, Indiana and California —
which do require Holocaust education — were most likely to believe the
Holocaust is a myth or has been exaggerated, at rates higher than 20 percent of
the surveyed population. "Holocaust education is extremely local,"
Schneider said. "Teachers are the heroes in this story, particularly this
year, where the challenges are beyond imaginable. In general, teachers can be
overwhelmed in classrooms with the content and the lack of time and resources.
Really, what we're trying to do is make sure proper training and resources and
support is available to teachers across the country."
Eyewitness testimony is the most powerful tool
available to educators, said Gretchen Skidmore, director of education initiatives
at the Holocaust Memorial Museum. "There is nothing that can replace the
stories of survivors in Holocaust education," Skidmore said. "It is
very meaningful when you see a student listening to a survivor, hearing how
individuals responded to this watershed event in human history and thinking not
only what would I have done but what will I do with the choices I face
today." Still, educators are preparing for the day when there are no more
living Holocaust survivors to join the classroom, including efforts to digitize
their stories. "The fact that that recorded testimony exists and is being
collected and maintained is a really useful tool now, and it will continue to
be a useful tool in the future," said Ariel Behrman, who heads the
Anti-Defamation League's Echoes & Reflections program, a Holocaust
education program in partnership with the USC Shoah Foundation at the
University of Southern California and Yad Vashem, Israel's official memorial to
the victims of the Holocaust. The Echoes & Reflections program has reached
over 14,250 schools and 72,000 teachers at no cost to educators, according to
its website. "The interest is there, without a doubt," Behrman said.
"Teachers really do seek us out. There are a lot of things students can
learn from the past and from those who experienced the Holocaust. There are
also contemporary connections to be made, and students can apply what they
learned to their world today." These days, Holocaust education is about
teaching more than just facts, Behrman said. Last week, Echoes &
Reflections released a national survey of 1,500 college students, which found
that high school Holocaust education was associated with students' being more
empathetic, tolerant and socially responsible. Students with Holocaust
education reported themselves to be more likely to stand up to negative
stereotyping, for example, and more willing to challenge incorrect or biased
information. Learning about the Holocaust is valuable, adults overwhelmingly
agreed in the survey. Eighty percent of the Claims Conference survey
respondents agreed that it was important to learn about the Holocaust partly so
it never happens again. "We've seen it time and time again,"
Schneider said. "Education is the best way to prevent ignorance and to
prevent hate."
^ This shows a sad state of
affairs especially when you consider that 2020 is the 75th Anniversary
of the end of World War 2 and the end of the Holocaust. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/survey-finds-shocking-lack-holocaust-072813993.html
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