Holocaust Education in Post-Communist Romania

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Holocaust

As Israeli historian Leon Volovici noted in a recent article, Romania today is  marked by the concurrent presence of a prolific nationalistic media with strong anti-Semitic accents and a swell of events dedicated to the history of its Jews. This remarkable paradox is perhaps just one more example of the originality of Romaniaโ€™s post-communist transition, the more so since the object of both trends is becoming less and less numerous every day: there are only about 9,000, mostly elderly Jews living in contemporary Romania. After 45 years of โ€œrelative silenceโ€ imposed by the communists and eight more years of โ€œrelevant silenceโ€ imposed by the neo-communists, as of 1998 the Holocaust is finally mentioned and discussed, but โ€œin the third personโ€, as it were: itโ€™s true, it happened, but not in Romania! (By the author)