From NewsCenterMaine:
“Survey
finds lack of Holocaust knowledge among young Americans”
A Holocaust
survivor who lives in Maine, Edith Pagelson, says educators have to do their
part to teach about this moment in history, to 'never forget.' A recent
national Holocaust knowledge and awareness survey by the Claims Conference
found many younger Americans don't know much about the Holocaust. The data was collected in all 50 states, 200
interviews were conducted in each state targeted for Millennials and Gen Z,
adults ages 18-39. More than half of the people interviewed in Maine didn't
know about how large the loss of life in concentration camps was, 6 million
Jews and about 5 million non-Jews that included Jehovah witnesses, homosexuals,
gypsies, people with disabilities, and others.
One of the
organizations in the state that is trying to address the increased lack of
knowledge on the Holocaust and other genocides is the Holocaust and Human
Rights Center of Maine in Augusta. "Our approach is to work as partners
with the teachers and provide them with the additional resources they need to
help students take a deeper dive into these issues like the Holocaust and human
rights," said David Greenham, interim executive director at the Holocaust
and Human Right Center of Maine. "This is something that it will never
forget, you don't have to talk about it all the time but you can teach it, and
that's what I did," said Edith Lucas Pagelson, a holocaust survivor.
Edith Pagelson
lived in Germany with her family back in the 1930s when the Nazis slowly took
control of most of Europe. Pagelson was sent along with her family to different
concentration camps in Europe, including Auschwitz, Birkenau, Stuthoff, and
Theresienstadt. "All this time I
was with my mother, so we had each other," Pagelson said. Pagelson
survived and was released from Theresienstadt along with her mother when she
was 15. "We were half dead, and I had very bad frozen feet," added
Pagelson. Pagelson tells NEWS CENTER Maine it is a true miracle that she is
alive, and she made it her mission to share her story to educate others and
avoid this horrific moment in history to ever repeat itself. Pagelson moved to
New York to meet with her sister who also survived, she has been living in
Falmouth for the past 12 years. "They have handed the mantle to the rest
of us to keep those stories alive," Greenham said. He said the lessons
from the Holocaust are still relevant today. "How do we work with each
other? How do we all live here together? And until we figure that out, I think
the work never ends."
Some of the
findings of the survey include:
Nationally, 48%
could not name a single one of the more than 40,000 concentration camps or
ghettos established during World War II.
63% did not
know six million Jews were murdered.
11% of
respondents believe Jews caused the Holocaust.
49% have seen
Holocaust denial or distortion posts on social media or elsewhere online.
64% believe
that Holocaust education should be compulsory in school.
"We will
continue to do that work through our exhibits through our educational programs,
both here but also online and virtually," says Greenham.
"People
said, even friends.. you are here! Now
forget about it! That was the worst thing..how could you forget that?"
added Pagelson.
The director of
communications for the Maine Department of Education, Kelli Deveaux, tells us
most Maine schools teach Holocaust studies as part of their curriculum, but it
is not a requirement for Maine schools. She says, "all educators take
seriously their responsibilities to help students know and understand past
atrocities in the hope that we will not repeat them in the future." The
Maine DOE does provide multiple resources on topics and themes, and this
includes genocide/Holocaust. At Bangor
schools, the interim superintendent Kathy Harris-Smedberg says middle School
students have a quick exposure through US History and read The Diary of a Young
Girl by Anne Frank. "In the History
Department students are exposed to an introduction to the Holocaust in their
required US History class which is generally taken in either the 10th or 11th
grade. Unfortunately, this is a somewhat cursory treatment and it is usually
taught in conjunction with other material on World War Two. Students who take
elective History Department classes in Current Issues in Global Studies, World
History II, AP European History, and AP World History have other opportunities
to learn about the Holocaust. All 9th-grade students read Elie Weisel's
"Night" in their English class," said Harris-Smedberg.
^ It’s
important that people from every country and in every age group know and
understand what happened during the Holocaust. These horrible events happened
from 1933-1945, but continue to have a direct impact on most of the world today
– 76 years later. ^
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