From Claims Con:
“FIRST-EVER
50-STATE SURVEY ON HOLOCAUST KNOWLEDGE OF AMERICAN MILLENNIALS AND GEN Z
REVEALS SHOCKING RESULTS”
(Recent picture of the entrance of the Auschwitz 1 Concentration Camp outside of Krakow, Poland. "Arbeit Macht Frei" means "Work Will Set You Free.")
Disturbing
Findings Reveal Significant Number Of Millennials and Gen Z Can’t Name A Single
Concentration Camp Or Ghetto, Believe That Two Million Or Fewer Jews Were
Killed And A Concerning Percentage Believe That Jews Caused The Holocaust The
Claims Conference has produced five studies examining Holocaust knowledge and
education worldwide
Gideon Taylor,
President of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims
Conference), today announced the release of the U.S. Millennial Holocaust
Knowledge and Awareness Survey, the first-ever 50-state survey on Holocaust
knowledge among Millennials and Gen Z. The surprising state-by-state results
highlight a worrying lack of basic Holocaust knowledge, a growing problem as
fewer and fewer Holocaust survivors – eyewitnesses to a state-sponsored
genocide – are alive to share the lessons of the Holocaust.
Nationally, there
is a clear lack of awareness of key historical facts; 63 percent of all
national survey respondents do not know that six million Jews were murdered and
36 percent thought that “two million or fewer Jews” were killed during the
Holocaust. Additionally, although there were more than 40,000 camps and ghettos
in Europe during the Holocaust, 48 percent of national survey respondents
cannot name a single one. The state-by-state analysis yielded a particularly
disquieting finding that nearly 20 percent of Millennials and Gen Z in New York
feel the Jews caused the Holocaust. “The results are both shocking and
saddening and they underscore why we must act now while Holocaust survivors are
still with us to voice their stories,” said Gideon Taylor. “We need to
understand why we aren’t doing better in educating a younger generation about
the Holocaust and the lessons of the past. This needs to serve as a wake-up
call to us all, and as a road map of where government officials need to act.”
The study
reveals that Wisconsin scores highest in Holocaust awareness among U.S.
Millennials and Gen Z. Arkansas has the lowest Holocaust knowledge score1, with
less than 2-in-10 (17 percent) of Millennials and Gen Z meeting the Holocaust
knowledge criteria. We calculated our Holocaust “knowledge score” by using the
percentage of Millennials and Gen Z adults who met all three of the following
criteria: 1) have “Definitively heard about the Holocaust,” AND 2) can name at
least one concentration camp, death camp, or ghetto, AND 3) know that 6 million
Jews were killed in the Holocaust. In what might be considered a disturbing
sign of the times, 59 percent of respondents indicate that they believe
something like the Holocaust could happen again.
The states
with the highest Holocaust Knowledge Scores are: Wisconsin, Minnesota,
Massachusetts, Maine, Kansas, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Idaho, Iowa, and Montana.
The states
with the lowest Holocaust Knowledge Scores are: Alaska, Delaware, Maryland,
New York, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, Florida, Mississippi, and Arkansas.
We calculated
our Holocaust “knowledge score” by using the percentage of Millennials and Gen
Z adults who met all three of the following criteria: 1) have “Definitively
heard about the Holocaust,” AND 2) can name at least one concentration camp,
death camp, or ghetto, AND 3) know that 6 million Jews were killed in the
Holocaust.
Major Survey
Findings
Camps and
Ghettos Nationally, 48 percent of
U.S. Millennial and Gen Z could not name a single one of the more than 40,000
concentration camps or ghettos established during World War II. This number is
reflected in individual state outcomes, with an astounding 60 percent of respondents
in Texas, 58 percent in New York, and 57 percent in South Carolina, unable to
name a single camp or ghetto.
56 percent of
U.S. Millennial and Gen Z were unable to identify Auschwitz-Birkenau, and there
was virtually no awareness of concentration camps and ghettos overall. Only six
percent of respondents are familiar with the infamous Dachau camp, while
awareness of Bergen-Belsen (three percent), Buchenwald (one percent) and
Treblinka (one percent) is virtually nonexistent.
Number of
Jews Murdered When asked how many Jews were killed during the Holocaust, 63
percent of Millennials and Gen Z did not know six million Jews were murdered.
The states with the lowest scores for this question are Arkansas with 69
percent, followed by Delaware with 68 percent, Arizona with 67 percent,
Mississippi and Tennessee with 66 percent, and Hawaii, Iowa, Vermont, and West
Virginia with 65 percent.
When broken
down further, 36 percent of Millennials and Gen Z thought that two million or
fewer Jews were murdered. Arkansas ranks as the state with the lowest awareness
of this widely known data point, with 37 percent believing two million or fewer
were murdered, followed by 36 percent in Georgia, Indiana and Ohio; 35 percent
in Minnesota; and 34 percent in Arizona, Iowa, Kentucky and New Hampshire.
Responsibility
for the Holocaust In perhaps one of the most disturbing revelations of this
survey, 11 percent of U.S. Millennial and Gen Z respondents believe Jews caused
the Holocaust. The findings were more disturbing in New York where an
astounding 19 percent of respondents felt Jews caused the Holocaust; followed
by 16 percent in Louisiana, Tennessee, and Montana and 15 percent in Arizona,
Connecticut, Georgia, Nevada and New Mexico.
Holocaust
Denial Also troubling is the percentage of Millennials and Gen Z that have
witnessed Holocaust denial or distortion on social media. Approximately half
(49 percent) of U.S. Millennials and Gen Z have seen Holocaust denial or
distortion posts on social media or elsewhere online.
30 percent of
respondents across all 50 states indicated that they had seen Nazi symbols on
their social media platforms or in their community. The state with the highest
response was Nevada with 70 percent. Other states with high scores include: New
York with 67 percent;
Arizona and
Texas with 64 percent; and Colorado, South Dakota and Washington with 63
percent.
Holocaust
Education A consistent bright spot across all the survey findings is the
desire for Holocaust education. 64 percent of all U.S. Millennials and Gen Z
believe that Holocaust education should be compulsory in school. 80
percent of all respondents believe that it is important to continue teaching
about the Holocaust, in part, so that it does not happen again. “We came to
realize that, although a number of states already mandate Holocaust education
which is an excellent first step,” said Claims Conference Holocaust task force
leader Matthew Bronfman. “For the mandates to have a significant effect in
classrooms there must be state funding to support the mandates. The Holocaust
is a broad topic. Specialized teacher training and thoughtfully developed
curriculum are needed for students to benefit.”
Claims
Conference Executive Vice President Greg Schneider said of the survey, “Not
only was their overall lack of Holocaust knowledge troubling, but combined with
the number of Millennials and Gen Z who have seen Holocaust denial on social
media, it is clear that we must fight this distortion of history and do all we
can to ensure that the social media giants stop allowing this harmful content
on their platforms. Survivors lost their families, friends, homes and
communities; we cannot deny their history.” The Claims Conference recently
launched #NoDenyingIt, a digital campaign in which survivors, in personal and moving
videos appeal directly to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg – imploring him to
remove Holocaust denial from his platform. The survey findings underscore the
importance the urgent need to understand the Holocaust denial is hate speech
and to remove denial of this critical historic event.
Survey
Taskforce A U.S. Millennial Holocaust Knowledge and Awareness Survey task
force led by Claims Conference Board member Matthew Bronfman, was comprised of
Holocaust survivors as well as historians and subject matter experts from
museums, educational institutions and leading nonprofits in the field of
Holocaust education, including Yad Vashem, the United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum, the Claims Conference and George Washington University.
Survey
Methodology and Sample The Holocaust Knowledge and Awareness Study was
commissioned by the Claims Conference. Data was collected in the United States
and analyzed by Schoen Cooperman Research, with a representative sample of
1,000 interviews nationwide and 200 interviews in each state with adults ages
18 to 39 via landline, cell phone and online interviews. Respondents were
selected at random and constituted a demographically representative sample of
the Millennial population across each state.
^ Sadly, the United
States of America and most of the world knows little to nothing about what
happened during the Holocaust. The terms “Never Forget” and “Never Again” have
become “Never Learned About.” There is a lot more interesting information and
maps about this poll on their website. ^
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