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  • Sarkozy's holocaust plan slated

    Independent Online, South Africa
    Feb 15 2008


    Sarkozy's holocaust plan slated

    February 15 2008 at 03:03PM

    Paris - A proposal from President Nicolas Sarkozy that French
    10-year-olds should sponsor the memory of Jewish children who were
    murdered by the Nazis set off an outcry on Friday among
    psychologists, parents and the political left.

    In an address to Jewish leaders, Sarkozy said that from the start of
    the next academic year pupils in their last year of primary school
    should be "entrusted with the memory of one of the 11 000 French
    children who fell victim to the Holocaust."

    "Nothing is more moving for a child than the story of a child his own
    age, who had the same games, the same joys and the same hopes as
    him," Sarkozy said.

    Education Minister Xavier Darcos explained that every child will be
    given the name of a Jewish deportee and "carry out a little
    investigation on their family, surroundings and the circumstances in
    which the child disappeared."

    'They are far too young at that age. They're not ready'
    "This personal, emotional link will be the basis for their studies,"
    he said.

    But an alliance of critics immediately poured scorn on the idea,
    accusing Sarkozy of usurping history, failing to understand the
    psychological impact on children, and stirring up resentment among
    other sectors of society.

    "I am totally against the idea that individual children should be
    made to carry this kind of burden. They are far too young at that
    age. They're not ready," said child psychiatrist Frederic Kochman.

    "Linking a child so intimately with a partner who is dead, and whose
    short life they can never understand, can only have harmful effects
    on his or her development," said the association Children of the
    World.

    Some 75 000 Jews were deported from German-occupied France in World
    War II, in most cases with the active cooperation of the French
    authorities. Nearly all died in the extermination camps at Auschwitz
    and elswhere.

    Even many who support greater awareness of the Jewish genocide said
    the president's idea was ill-thought out and could even provoke an
    unwanted backlash.

    "Some communities already think the Republic doesn't take sufficient
    account of their suffering: for example, black Caribbeans who want
    greater recognition of the tragedy of slavery, or Armenians
    concerning their own genocide," said Francosi Puppi, mayor of the
    Paris suburb of Sarcelles.

    For Pascal Bruckner, a left-wing philosopher who backed Sarkozy in
    last year's election, his idea smacks of "the tyranny of repentance"
    and "adds nothing except pathos."

    "Young people have been given their fill of the Holocaust for years
    and years, and it hasn't stopped the rise of anti-Semitism in the
    suburbs...This is a dangerous intitiative which is only going to add
    to the idea that there's one rule for the Jews. Compassion can be
    dangerous," he said.

    However the president won support from Serge Klarsfeld, the Jewish
    historian who has done more than anyone to keep the names of French
    Holocaust victims in the collective memory.

    "It's not a question of some morbid identification with a dead child.
    It's an act of vigilance...It's important that today's children know
    that there were children of their own age and background who were
    deported, and it's important that these be named," he said.

    Socialist Party leader Francois Hollande also backed the initiative,
    but his colleague former minister Pierre Moscovici said it was "a
    false good idea which brings with it much that is psychologically and
    educationally dangerous."

    "It is typical Sarkozy - a man with plenty of impulse and sometimes
    not much reflexion," he said.
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