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Discussion Papers Journal (Vol 3) Volume III presents a diverse group of authors writing on a wide range of topics. Among the contributors are academics, researchers, and sociologists, the chairman of a world-renowned Holocaust museum, the Special Advisers to the Secretary-General on the Prevention of Genocide and the Responsibility to Protect, a Hollywood filmmaker, and a former United Nations intern. They are from Canada, Denmark, Israel, Morocco, Senegal, Serbia, the United Kingdom and the United States. Their articles deal with a fascinating wide range of issues including Holocaust education in Denmark, and in Morocco; the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance; music and the Holocaust; rescue; the preservation of former Nazi concentration and death camps; crimes committed against the Roma and Sinti during the Second World War; the post-Holocaust memory of German-Jewish achievements; and the prevention of atrocity crimes. (By the publisher)
Discussion Papers Journal (Vol 3) Volume III présente un groupe diversifié d'auteurs écrivant sur un large éventail de sujets. Parmi les contributeurs sont des universitaires, des chercheurs et des sociologues, le président d'un musée de l'Holocauste de renommée mondiale, les Conseillers spéciaux du Secrétaire général sur la prévention du génocide et la responsabilité de protéger, un cinéaste d'Hollywood, et un ancien stagiaire des Nations Unies . Ils sont du Canada, le Danemark, Israël, le Maroc, le Sénégal, la Serbie, le Royaume-Uni et aux États-Unis. Leurs articles traitent d'un large éventail fascinant de questions, y compris l'Holocauste au Danemark et au Maroc; l'Alliance internationale Holocauste; la musique et l'Holocauste; porter secours; la préservation des anciens camps de concentration et d'extermination nazis; les crimes commis contre les Roms et les Sintis pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale; la mémoire post-Holocauste des réalisations juifs allemands; et la prévention des crimes atroces. (Par l'éditeur)
Discover the past for the future: The role of historical sites and museums in Holocaust education and human rights education in the EU The Holocaust has rightfully become an integral part of the collective cultural memory of Europe and the world. This report outlines the findings of the first EU-wide research on the role of Holocaust-related sites and exhibitions in educating young Europeans about the Holocaust and human rights. With this research, the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) brings the two fields of Holocaust education and human rights education together and suggests how the merging of the two could develop into a new knowledge of past and present. The report highlights that attempts to expand knowledge of human rights and to establish links between Holocaust education and human rights education need a broader focus than the memorial sites or museums can offer. Much of the work on linking Holocaust education and human rights education needs to be accomplished in schools. This requires teachers to have opportunities to gain a better understanding of human rights education, and human rights education to be better integrated into school curricula in the EU. Visits to memorial sites and museums can stimulate, support and supplement such work. (By the publisher)
´Holocaust Fatigue': Teaching it today The review "Research & Practice", established early in 2001, features educational research that is directly relevant to the work of classroom teachers. Here, I invited Simone Schweber to examine teaching and learning about the Holocaust in light of alternative approaches, current politics, and popular culture. (By the publisher)
L'enseignement de la Shoah dans les écoles juives In this article, Katy Hazan studies the teaching of the Holocaust in Jewish schools. First, she portrays the educational systems of these specific schools and second, she establishes all the ethical, philosophical issues this theme entails. In the third part, she takes inventory of alternative ways of teaching the Holocaust, to conclude on the danger of emotional approaches.
Teaching the Holocaust at a distance : reflections from the field As technology continues to improve and online learning programs continue to proliferate each year throughout the United States, it is necessary for teachers to establish a sound understanding of proper pedagogical techniques for a digital environment. This phenomenon has ushered in a new era of education, thus bringing forth a myriad of new questions and issues that must be addressed. For instance, how should online instructors properly transfer and teach traditional core subjects in an online milieu? Social studies educators are faced with additional quandaries, such as teaching democratic processes for effective citizenship and the teaching of controversial issues/topics like the Holocaust. Undeniably, controversial topics elicit strong emotions and come with a plethora of concerns that seem only possible to address in a face-to-face classroom. This current exploration draws upon the scholarship and experience of experts in the field of social studies education, distance learning, and Holocaust Studies to provide suggestions as to how teachers should approach controversial topics in a digital learning environment. An example lesson plan is also provided to showcase a successful integration of controversial issues into an online high school social studies classroom. (By the author)
Seeing the world from today from a different viewpoint: The impact of the lessons from Auschwitz project on schools in Scotland Auschwitz remains the epitome of inhumanity and barbarism. In 2007, the Holocaust Educational Trust organised the first Lessons from Auschwitz (LFA) project for Scottish schools. Its participants were two plane-loads of Scottish pupils and teachers from 31 local authorities – typically two pupils from a school accompanied by a teacher. This research, funded by the Holocaust Educational Trust and the Pears Foundation, involved these participants being invited to complete an online questionnaire with selected follow-up interviews. The aims were to evaluate the LFA project and provide insight into the impact this project had on individuals, schools and communities. This paper will report on: Student evaluation of the LFA project ; The impact of the LFA project on individuals, schools and local communities. Conclusions as to the value of the LFA project in Scotland. (By the author)
Breaking Historical Silence through Cross-cultural collaboration: Latvian curriculum writers and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum fellows In response to the need for Holocaust curricula in Latvia, Latvians and Americans worked collaboratively to overcome the historical silence surrounding this event. During their project, Latvian curriculum writers worked with teachers and scholars at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. This descriptive analysis of the Latvians' experience with Museum Fellows revealed opportunities to learn from each other the complexities of teaching the Holocaust in a country viewed by some as collaborators and still somewhat anti-Semitic. Findings included depth of guidance, values, and limits of innovative teaching methods, cross-cultural benefits, and continued collaboration. Recommendations for future efforts by post-Communist countries and American partners to develop curriculum on teaching a most complex and contentious aspect of history such as the Holocaust conclude the study. (By the author)
Learning from genocide: a study in the failure of Holocaust education The importance of learning lessons from the Holocaust and from the mass slaughter in Rwanda was recognised in the theme underpinning Britain’s Holocaust Memorial Day in 2004. This article is principally concerned with the lessons learnt from the Holocaust by a culturally diverse group of students aged 14 to 16. They all attended schools in an outer London borough and were interviewed after taking part in a local event held to mark the 2004 commemoration. The article concludes with a discussion of the main findings of the investigation. (By the author)
Textbooks and the Holocaust in Independent Ukraine: An Uneasy Past The article examines how Ukrainian history textbooks dealt with the Holocaust between independence and 2006. The analysis reveals two major, conflicting narratives about the Holocaust, though both externalize and relativize the Holocaust. As a template for understanding genocide, the Holocaust was applied to the Soviet-imposed 1932-33 famine in Ukraine, the Holodomor. The emphasis placed on the famine in both narratives partially obscures the Holocaust and in propagating the Judeo-Bolshevik myth, turns Jews into leading perpetrators of the Holodomor. In the Ukrainian case, the complex relationship among history, historical culture, and contemporary politics is compounded by the familiar tension between national history and the international reality of the Holocaust. The historical Sovietization of Holocaust victims was attacked by historians in the Ukrainian diaspora who resented the accusations that Ukrainians were collaborators and fascists. They sought to replace the Soviet historical narrative with one that made Ukrainians the central victims, not perpetrators. Ukraine's own nationalization of the Holocaust functioned in much the same way as the Sovietization of the Holocaust. Nationalization, obfuscation, and an implicit competition among victim narratives all contribute to the relatively complicated place of the Holocaust in Ukrainian historical narratives. (By the author) 