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  • Children In Former Soviet Union Know Little About Holocaust

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Jan 26 2005

    East: Children In Former Soviet Union Know Little About Holocaust
    By Jeremy Bransten



    A personal memorial at the Birkenau death camp

    World leaders gather this week to commemorate the 60th anniversary of
    the Red Army's liberation of the Auschwitz concentration camp in
    Poland. Although the Nazis operated many deaths camps throughout
    Europe, Auschwitz was the largest and it has come to symbolize the
    horror of the regime's atrocities in its purest form. Six millions
    Jews were murdered by the Nazis in World War II -- more than one
    million of them in Auschwitz alone. Millions of non-Jews perished
    alongside them -- there and in other death camps -- as part of a
    systematic liquidation campaign unequalled, in planning and scale, in
    recorded history. This is known as the Holocaust. If another
    Holocaust is to be avoided, historians warn, the lesson of what
    happened at Auschwitz and other death camps must be taught to future
    generations. But what do today's schoolchildren know about the events
    of 60 years ago?


    Prague, 26 January 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Ask children on the streets of
    Minsk what they know about Auschwitz and the Holocaust and you are
    liable to get some disturbing answers.

    One 13-year-old girl has this to say: "I think Auschwitz is a type of
    hoofed animal."

    Her friend does somewhat better -- but her answer is far from
    complete: "It was some sort of camp during the Great Patriotic War.
    They burned Jews there.""I have no idea what the Holocaust is. I have
    never heard anything about something like the Holocaust."

    A third girl answers: "We could tell you more if they taught us
    something about it in school."

    Belarus may be a disturbing example, especially considering the
    country's history of Jewish settlement prior to World War II and the
    country's devastation during the conflict. But it is hardly unique.

    In 1944, the word "genocide" was coined to describe the Nazis'
    attempt to liquidate the Jews, Roma, and other groups in their
    entirety. Four years later, the word was officially adopted in the
    United Nations Convention Against Genocide.

    Yet for decades, in the former Soviet Union, all war dead were only
    identified as Soviet citizens. The Holocaust was mentioned only in
    passing, if it all. Today, several former Soviet countries are trying
    to remedy the situation, making the teaching of the Holocaust an
    obligatory subject in school.

    But progress so far depends more on the initiative of individual
    teachers. Textbooks are lacking, and so is general interest among
    students. Kazakh history teacher Amina Tortayeva describes the
    situation at her school in Almaty: "We do not have a special course
    on that. There are many courses on the war period and we give some
    kind of information on that ourselves. But in our textbooks there is
    nothing written about the Holocaust. So I cannot say we have full
    knowledge on that issue."

    Her students do not perform much better than their counterparts in
    Minsk.

    RFE/RL correspondent: "Have you heard about the Holocaust?"

    Student: "No, not at all. Holocaust? I have no idea what the
    Holocaust is. I have never heard anything about something like the
    Holocaust."

    Irina Belareva, a high-school teacher in Moscow, says it falls to the
    teacher to decide whether the Holocaust is taught or not as a
    specific subject in Russia. "If you take the school curriculum,
    specific discussion of the Holocaust is not required," she said. "I
    talk about it, but to a large extent, it depends, of course, on the
    teacher."

    Even in Armenia, whose people suffered their own genocide a quarter
    of a century before the Jews, knowledge among young people of the
    extent, methods, and reasons for the Nazi Holocaust is shallow at
    best.

    Our correspondent in Yerevan quizzed several young people about what
    they know about those events. The most comprehensive -- if factually
    incorrect -- answer came from a 19-year-old boy: "The Holocaust was
    perpetrated by Hitler. One-and-a half million people died. Hitler
    sought the extermination of the Jews because I think Jews in Germany
    had very high positions. That's why he exterminated them and
    expropriated their property."

    For years after World War II, discussion of the Holocaust in schools
    in Western Europe was also minimal. Events were too raw. Survivors
    wanted to forget their trauma. And the issue of collaboration with
    the Nazis by parts of the population in many countries cast a shadow
    over a fuller discussion of the war.

    It was not until relatively recently that schools in Western Europe
    began to teach the Holocaust in a comprehensive way. Germany,
    understandably, has one of the best programs. Students learn about
    the Holocaust and other aspects of the war in history classes, civics
    lessons, and postwar literature studies. Visits to former
    concentration camps as well as talks with survivors are also
    frequently used.

    Chana Moshenska, who runs educational programs at the Centre for
    German-Jewish Studies at Britain's University of Sussex, says
    discussions with survivors are one of the most effective ways to get
    children interested in learning about the period. "One way that does
    work -- but having said that, it's only going to work for a short
    time -- is survivor testimony," she said. "I think survivor testimony
    is the most powerful way that young people can relate to what
    actually happened in the Holocaust. Now, obviously, that's
    time-limited because survivors are getting older. They haven't got
    the energy to speak and soon they won't be able to speak in public.
    But when they come and speak, what young people see is someone who
    looks like grandma or grandpa. And that has an enormous impact. And
    then, quite often, these are people who experienced the Holocaust
    when they were teenagers. And they're able to say, 'When I was 15,
    this is what I was doing,' or 'This is what happened to my little
    brother, this is what happened to my mother.' And that has an
    enormous impact on young people."

    RFE/RL analyst Michael Shafir is an expert on the period and served
    on the International Commission for the Study of the Holocaust in
    Romania, chaired by Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel.

    He notes that Eastern Europe bears the twin burden of the Nazi and
    Communist eras, making open discussion about past crimes, ethics and
    responsibility -- especially with children -- doubly difficult,
    although he believes, doubly necessary.

    "Unlike Western Europe, East-Central Europe must not overcome one
    difficult past, but two difficult pasts," he said. "That, of course,
    of whatever happened during World War II and its communist past. Now,
    in both these cases there is a tendency to transform not only
    villains but mainly collaborators or even stand-by witnesses into
    martyrs and heroes."

    Students -- be they in Russia or Britain -- can be easily interested
    in investigating the past, if a personal connection is made.
    Fifteen-year-old Tatyana tells our Moscow correspondent she knows
    about the Holocaust and she related it to the experience of her
    grandfather in the Soviet gulag. "It concerns me a lot because my
    grandfather, under Stalin, was sent to the [Soviet gulag] camps," she
    said. "When I was 10 years old, I read his diary. He left a diary
    about it all and it had a strong impact on me."

    Shafir says the sooner the East comes to grips with the truth of its
    past, the better. "Genocide" was coined to describe the Nazi
    Holocaust, but it is a word that has unfortunately had to be used
    since, to describe more recent events in Cambodia and Rwanda. Shafir
    says genocide is likely to be repeated until the lessons of the
    Holocaust are learned by children today: "It is important to convey
    to anyone that the Holocaust was not something that Germans did unto
    Jews. It is important to convey that this is something that anyone
    can do unto anyone else. That is the tragedy of the Holocaust."

    People's willingness to forget crimes of the past was a lesson not
    lost on Hitler himself. Sending his troops into Poland in 1939, he
    ordered them to be merciless, saying: Who today remembers the
    extermination of the Armenians?"

    (RFE/RL's Armenian, Belarus, Kazakh, and Russian services contributed
    to this report.)
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