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Shifting perceptions of the Holocaust in the Arab world – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on October 8, 2020

Ordinarily, there is nothing sensational about the words never again inscribed in the visitors book at the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin.Dozens, if not hundreds and thousands of visitors, have used that slogan in guest books to sum up their feelings after visiting the Berlin Holocaust Memorial or Yad Vashem or numerous other Holocaust memorials around the world.Never again shall that fate befall the Jewish people. Never again shall the world allow another Holocaust.But what makes the writing of the words Tuesday in Berlin truly significant is that they were written in Arabic, as well as in English, and that the person who wrote them was United Arab Emirates Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed.Bin Zayed was in Berlin for a meeting with his Israeli counterpart, Gabi Ashkenazi.It is not everyday that a minister of an Arab or Muslim state visits a Holocaust memorial, nor every day that he writes a slogan that has become synonymous with Israels imperative to defend itself against those seeking to destroy it.Bin Zayed called the site a witness to the fall of a group of human beings who were victims of advocates of extremism and hatred. cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });I salute the souls of those who fell victim to the Holocaust, he wrote, then translating into Arabic the traditional Hebrew saying regarding those who have died, May their souls be bound up in the bonds of eternal life.Bin Zayeds impressive visit a testament to the degree to which Abu Dhabi wants to ensure that the recently signed agreement between the two countries will be a warm peace between the peoples becomes even more exceptional considering the history of Holocaust denial and attempts to minimize the scope of the Holocaust in the Mideast.For instance, just across the Gulf from the UAE is Iran, a country whose leaders frequently peddle in Holocaust denial, and which periodically holds Holocaust denial cartoon competitions and seminars.Closer to home, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas wrote a Holocaust revisionist dissertation for his PhD from a Russian University in 1982 titled, Connection between the Nazis and the Leaders of the Zionist Movement 1933 1945.In that dissertation, later turned into a book, Abbas wrote that the Zionist movement collaborated with the Nazis in order to get Jews to move to Palestine. He also wrote that the figure of six million Jews killed was exaggerated, and that the number of dead was closer to one million. He has never unequivocally disassociated himself from this thesis.It is against this background that bin Zayeds visit and words must be seen, and which make them impressive.For years Holocaust denial held sway in large parts of the Mideast where it was also common to believe that the West created Israel as a form of compensation for the Holocaust. Since many in the region also deny any historical Jewish claim to Israel, if you deny the Holocaust, then you wash away any possible justification for the creation of the State of Israel.Seen in this context, the UAE foreign ministers visit to a Holocaust memorial was the logical next step following his countrys courageous decision to sign a peace deal with Israel, a move that recognized the Jewish states legitimacy. Once you recognize Israels legitimacy, there is no need to deny the Holocaust.Bin Zayeds visit was seen largely as a respectful gesture toward Israelis and as a way to signal a desire to build a different kind of relationship with Israel than that which exists between Israel and Jordan and Egypt.But it was more than that. This visit, covered in the Arabic press, also sent an important message to the Arab world about the need to look truthfully at the past, and that nothing is gained by denying history. Just as bin Zayed delivered his remarks last month at the White House signing ceremony in Arabic ensuring that his people heard what he said about the agreement so too did he sign the guest book in Arabic.Peace, as the failure of the Oslo Accords showed, will not take root simply because leaders sign agreements. Attitudes need to change, hearts and minds addressed. Bin Zayeds visit to the Berlin Holocaust Memorial is a laudable indication that the Emirates intend to do just that.

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Shifting perceptions of the Holocaust in the Arab world - The Jerusalem Post

Many young people still lack basic knowledge of the Holocaust – The Conversation UK

Posted By on October 8, 2020

A significant number of young adults in the US cannot name a single concentration camp or ghetto, believe that Jews caused the Holocaust and that two million or fewer Jews were killed.

These are the findings of a recent survey from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference) into young peoples understanding of the Holocaust. The survey revealed that 63% of respondents did not know that six million Jews were murdered, while 48% could not name a single death camp.

The survey, of young adults age 18-39, also found that 23% said they believed the Holocaust was a myth, had been exaggerated or they werent sure.

Previous reports commissioned by Claims Conference, whose mission is to provide a measure of justice for Jewish Holocaust victims, have also found critical gaps in Holocaust knowledge among French and Austrian young adults.

Similar research in the UK shows that while many young people learn about the Holocaust in school and display curiosity towards the topic, their knowledge and understanding of the subject is often limited and based on inaccuracies and misconceptions.

Since 1991, the Holocaust has been a mandatory topic in the National Curriculum in England. There is not the same formal requirement in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, although teaching of the Holocaust does still occur.

Despite existing in several different iterations, the Holocaust has remained a required element of Key Stage 3 (13 to 14-year-olds) history teaching in English schools. Many students also learn about the Holocaust in other subjects, such as English and religious studies.

But the Centre for Holocaust Education based at University College London has found that it isnt just students who lack knowledge about the Holocaust.

The Centres surveys of teachers in the UK found that some educators lack the firm subject understanding needed to grapple with such a complex historical topic.

A key sticking point appears to be the vagueness with which the National Curriculum frames study of the Holocaust. There has been a consistent lack of guidance relating to how or why the Holocaust should be taught.

This means the nature of Holocaust education in schools remains heavily dependent on the actions of individual teachers. So although several organisations offer courses for educators to help expand their knowledge in this area, participation is voluntary. As such, it is unsurprising that the quality of Holocaust education is inconsistent across the UK.

There is also an ongoing disconnect between academic research and teaching practice. This gap makes it difficult to translate recommendations into reality and obstructs the development of Holocaust education.

In recent years, the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, a charity established and funded by the UK government to promote and support Holocaust Memorial Day in the UK, has partly reoriented its focus towards other examples of genocide, such as those in Rwanda and Darfur. So resources offered to school teachers now address topics other than the Holocaust alone.

This diversification is not to be criticised in itself. Yet, it does pose the risk of diverting educational efforts further away from the Holocaust. Conceivably, a decrease in the amount of time spent by students engaging with the Holocaust has the potential to jeopardise levels of subject understanding among young people.

It is also naive to perceive the classroom as a hermetically-sealed environment. Holocaust education is influenced by many external factors and there has, for example, been an increasing spread of online Holocaust denial.

Equally, popular culture continues to have a profound impact on public consciousness of the Holocaust with John Boynes novel The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas receiving particular scrutiny. Several historical inaccuracies within the plot - namely the friendship between a concentration camp inmate and the son of a German commandant - have led to the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum advising against the use of the book during teaching of the Holocaust.

Given the provisions and the scope of Holocaust education in the UK, there is cause for optimism. And although there have been many improvements in Holocaust education in the UK, it should never be assumed that the process has been completed. Holocaust education is a living organism, and continues to face many challenges. Put simply, the Holocaust is reinterpreted on a generational basis.

The findings from the US presented in the Claims Conference report symbolise a stark warning against complacency and emphasise the essential need for continual development of Holocaust education. It is critical, then, that the field of Holocaust education continues to react to changing circumstances. If memory of the Holocaust is to stay alive, Holocaust education cannot remain static.

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Many young people still lack basic knowledge of the Holocaust - The Conversation UK

Roth in the age of Trump – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on October 8, 2020

When Peter Sagal recently reread Philip Roths 2005 novel The Plot Against America, he was struck at how prescient Roth was in describing this creeping and expanding sense of dread and disbelief that for him characterizes these years of Donald Trump.

He was so amazingly accurate, Mr. Sagal, the host of NPRs Wait WaitDont Tell Me, said.

Mr. Segal reread the novel, which he first had read not long after it was published, as part of his preparation for hosting the six-part podcast, logically enough called The Plot Against America Podcast, for HBO to accompany the networks television rendering of Roths novel. The book tells the story of an alternate American history where aviator Charles Lindbergh was elected president on an isolationist American First platform that shaded into anti-Semitism.

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The podcast also featured the shows director, David Simon, and is a must-listen for Roth fans if only to hear Simon recount his 90-minute meeting in 2017 with the novelist to discuss the changes that would be made in adapting the book for television. (It was Roth who insisted that the filmed version rename the characters who, in the novel, were the Roths.)

In a couple of weeks, Mr. Sagal will moderate a discussion on the book and the miniseries sponsored by Congregation Bnai Israel in Rumson. The congregation is led by Rabbi Doug Sagal, Peters brother. (See box.)

Mr. Sagal grew up in Berkeley Heights in the 1960s, 30 years after Roths childhood, which he describes and reimagines in The Plot Against America. Mr. Sagals father grew up in Brooklyn and he was a few years younger than Mr. Roth, but its hard to imagine the Jews of Newark in the 30s and 40s were living very differently than the Jews of Brooklyn, Mr. Sagal said.

HBO hired Mr. Sagal to prepare the Plot podcast after he had made a similar podcast for an earlier HBO show, Chernobyl. That story of a sclerotic government mismanaging a scientific catastrophe took on a new resonance this year, after the Trump administration failed to stem the covonavirus and the virus, for its part, failed to simply vanish as the administration had promised it would.

A friend of mine wanted to get in touch with Craig Mazin, the shows creator, to talk with him about the obvious parallels, Mr. Sagal said. Craig said hes been getting so many requests hes not answering them.

Craig told me he conceived of the project long before Donald Trump was elected president. He never meant it as a commentary on the current moment in America. It clearly became one.

David Simon had a much more specific parallel between Trump and Roth. He had been approached years ago to adapt the book and thought it was pointless. He thought, Why would anyone be interested in some sort of fable of fascist takeover? With Trumps election a lot of people were interested.

For those who found Plot resonating in the last four years, the novels ending is particularly disquieting. The novelist does not show America overcoming Lindbergh and the hatred and violence he spawns; instead, one day Lindbergh flies away and disappears. It is a deus ex machina conclusion to a very realistic book.

It does have that feel, Mr. Sagal said.

My personal take on it is that the novel is very internal. Its all from the eyes of Philip Roth as a 9-year-old. Because of that, the entire novel has a feel of a nightmare, a really bad dream. Given that, it almost feels appropriate that it ends as if the nation woke up one day. Lindbergh disappears, and then history takes its normal course.

I think thats good for the book. You walk away from the book with the feeling that you awoke from a nightmare.

Obviously, David Simon had different interests. His ending has a kind of concreteness we associate with prestige television. He couldnt end it the way Roth did, any more than he could have ended The Wire with everyone coming back to life and embracing. He had to figure out how to work it out in realistic terms. If Lindbergh disappeared, it wouldnt have been by accident, so how did it happen? How would we know about it?

The major change in the ending is that David Simon refused to give the viewer of the TV show that same odd comfort the readers of the book had. He does not give you that. He ends it with Herman Levin Philip Roths father in the novel listening to the radio, trying to hear the first election result, with the strong indication that the election was being rigged. Thats where he leaves you. Its a very bold choice, maybe too strong a choice.

A while back, the New Jersey Jewish News named Mr. Sagal as one of the top 10 Jewish entertainers from New Jersey. Number one was Jon Stewart, Mr. Sagal said

Mr. Sagal is an award-winning playwright. His 1995 play Denial dealt with a Jewish lawyer who defends a Holocaust denier on First Amendment grounds.

Twenty-five years later, what are his thoughts about the balance between free speech and hate speech?

A huge difference between then and now is that in the play, the Holocaust denier, who was based on a real person, has to distribute his lies and propaganda via bulletins, newsletters and books, Mr. Sagal said. Now, of course, he has a YouTube channel. Or maybe an Instagram thing. And that obviously makes it so much easier to spread that stuff. How much easier is it to spread Holocaust denial or any conspiracy you want if all you need to do is to click on a button rather than go to a library and pick up a book?

I had to research Holocaust denial. Holocaust denial is a conspiracy theory. The conspiracy is that everybody, the Jews and the historians, have all conspired to pretend that it happened, to defame the noble Germans.

Ive started thinking a lot about conspiracy theories. Ive learned that conspiracy theories are very attractive because they make the world comprehensible. If theres something about the world that makes you upset, a conspiracy provides a better explanation.

The other thing it does is it gives people who are powerless a sense of power because they know the truth. Because they have knowledge, theyre no longer victims. Theyre in control.

I think that has a lot to do with the rise of QAnon. It tells believers that the people they like are really human and the people they hate are extraordinary villains, and just you wait, justice is coming. That may be the most powerful thing. All of it is feeding an appetite that exists.

Mr. Sagal said that hell lead the synagogue discussion like a book club. Im interested in what people have to say, how they relate it to whats gong on. Some people will say that to compare Lindbergh to the real President Trump is a travesty. Im interested in that. Im interested in hearing what people think about Roths basic accusation, if you will, that it would be a lot easier for America to slide into fascism than people like to think.

Is Roths story similar to our current reality, and if so, why?

What: Conversation on The Plot Against America by Philip Roth, moderated by NPRs Peter Sagal.

Where: Zoom session hosted by Congregation Bnai Israel in Rumson

When: Tuesday, October 20, at 7 p.m.

How much: Free

How to log on: Register at cbirumson.orgto be sent the Zoom link.

Link:

Roth in the age of Trump - The Jewish Standard

Slavery and racism haunt the US still. Could Germanys model for Holocaust remembrance be the answer? – Vox.com

Posted By on October 8, 2020

In the mid-1950s, a decade after World War II ended, the town of Dachau took down the directional signs that pointed to its concentration camp.

Visitors had swarmed the area not just survivors of the Holocaust whod been imprisoned there, but journalists and tourists who wanted to see what remained of the first Nazi concentration camp, where more than 200,000 people were detained and at least 32,000 were killed between 1933 and 1945. The attention exasperated the local population.

A writer for the New York Herald-Tribune made the trip to Dachau in March 1954 and met a German caretaker who tried to convince him that it was the Americans who had built the larger of the camps two crematoriums to make the Germans look bad. A clipping from a German newspaper dated around the same time parroted the claim: America had wanted to pin guilt on the innocent German people.

Local leaders in Dachau some of whom would have watched as thousands of people were marched at gunpoint from the town train station to the camp wanted to be rid of the spectacle. One official recommended that the crematoriums be bulldozed. When the municipal government dismissed the proposal (which had gone public, spurring an uproar from survivors), the town settled for a subtler revision, removing the signs instead.

The excision fit a national mood. Germans werent keen to dwell on the atrocities of the Nazi period, let alone to consider what portion of the blame for the mass murder, the torture, the forced labor should fall on them. If evidence of the Holocaust couldnt be razed, at least it neednt be emphasized. And with the erasure, a counternarrative rushed in to fill the void. In the 1940s and 1950s, Germans were clear about who the wars real victims were: Who had suffered more than they had?

Decades later, some of the children and grandchildren of the postwar generation would insist that the nation own up to its deep shame. The actions that followed were called Vergangenheitsaufarbeitung, which translates to working off the past. The process was so widespread in the 1980s and 1990s that some dont remember the entrenched, miserable resentment that preceded it.

It fell to private groups to build the first monuments honoring the people whod been deported to Dachau and killed there. This was in the 1960s the decade of the famed Eichmann trial, which broadcast the undeniable reality of Nazi crimes into millions of homes around the world, and of the international student protests that would sweep across the United States and Europe. There was a dawning awareness: Something grievous had happened, but too few were willing to admit it.

Even the modest remembrances erected in Dachau and at other sites of mass murder were ambivalent: At Dachau in 1960, a group of Catholic priests funded a small chapel on the campgrounds; its wall texts contained no mention of the Jewish genocide. After further memorials were unveiled there in 1966 and 1967, a British journalist who came to see the camp was disturbed to find the crematoriums concealed behind attractive, well-trimmed hedges. He found that several of the original structures had been demolished, revamped, or enhanced with a fresh coat of paint.

It means nothing as it is, a survivor told the journalist. Dachau had been disguised, said another critic, like a witch who wants to appear harmless.

In the runup to and aftermath of German reunification in 1990, Vergangenheitsaufarbeitung came to be seen as a moral imperative. Germans in their 20s and 30s mined for buried history, in their hometowns and in their families. Those who had fled Nazi terror submitted to in-depth interviews to leave a record of their ordeals; some, frail and aging, even returned to the sites of their torture across Europe. (In 2006, when Steven Spielbergs archive of the recorded testimonies of tens of thousands of Holocaust survivors became available to Germans via the Freie Universitt Berlin, the public broadcaster Deutsche Welle called it a Holocaust deniers worst nightmare.)

Determined to see a more honest reflection of the horrors perpetrated at Dachau, a group of survivors and historians issued a series of recommendations to redo the memorials there. Such acts of cultural rehabilitation and renovation were taking place all across German cities and towns, building on the state-mandated Nazi trials, the disbursal of reparations to victims, the overhaul of organizations like the police and armed forces, and the renewed commitment to and investment in democratic institutions. Dachau the historical birthplace of the Nazi concentration camp galvanized to meet the moment.

When I visited Dachau in September 2019, I could see that the work of Vergangenheitsaufarbeitung had taken effect. I walked toward the camp on a trail called the Path of Remembrance, which carves the same route across town that victims would have trod from the train station. A reconstructed iron gate at the camps entrance reads Arbeit Macht Frei Work Sets You Free. I took stock of the watchtower, the guardhouse, the barbed wire that looped like a childs script around the perimeter. Our German tour guide was unsparing in his account of his nations descent into darkness.

But just as the British journalist must have felt when he saw the manicured garden materialize amid Dachaus bleached landscape, I was unprepared to encounter the lush, pastoral spot where Arthur Kahn was shot and killed in April 1933.

His is a bewildering distinction: Arthur is believed to be the first Jew killed in what would become the Holocaust, dead a mere 10 weeks after Hitler came to power. When he was arrested and transported to Dachau with a group of fellow students, the camp had been open for just two weeks. The deaths of those first Jews were so senseless and violent (Arthur was tortured for hours before his execution) that a local prosecutor indicted the men whod killed them, a case the Nazis would later suppress.

The place was off to the side of the barracks, unmarked in a grove of tall, handsome trees. The archivists Id met with when I arrived put an X on a map of the camp a little memorial just for me. I walked over and stood in the place where Arthur had taken his final breaths, the edge of the forest creeping toward me.

We are honored that you came, the men in the archive had told me. And we are very sorry.

In German, there are a few words for what we in America would call a monument or memorial. In her book Learning from the Germans, the philosopher Susan Neiman lists them: a Denkmal commemorates an event that deserves attention. If the memorialized event is tragic or gruesome, the spot might be marked with a Mahnmal, which she translates as warning sign, the historical scar rendered in cement or marble. For monuments to horror that are large a restored concentration camp, for example Gedenksttte is the appropriate term, Neiman writes. The root word is denken (to think), and it signals the enormous amount of thought devoted to the question: What do we remember in matter, and how?

The question is one that the United States has begun to probe, with white Americans jolted awake this summer to the realization that perhaps streets should not be named for slave owners and domestic terrorists or crowned with statues exalting the traitors who declared a rebel government.

It is a reckoning that Germans undertook decades ago. Even in the bitter postwar period when Germans were quick to cast themselves as innocent the terms of their surrender forced at least some admission that their leaders had not been heroes and their cause had not been just.

After 1945, there were no monuments to Nazis on their boulevards. The streets and squares named after Hitler were rechristened within a matter of weeks. It became illegal to brandish a swastika, the Nazi emblem. Holocaust denial is also now a crime; perhaps those in power understood that a persons refusal to accept such a core truth is itself a societal menace. Germans outlawed capital punishment in 1949, knowing well the genocidal apparatus that its government once built to decide who should live or die. And the state has no legal means to enact the mass incarceration that has become a fact of American life. The German Constitution describes human dignity as inviolable; the nations laws so emphasize the right to privacy that living quarters in its prisons are almost exclusively designed for single occupants. Never mind the death penalty Germans dont even trust themselves with bunk beds.

With no equivalent international pressure to concede the defeat of its so-called Lost Cause, America has resisted such reconstruction. Until June 2020, the Confederate flag was immortalized in the state flag of Mississippi. It hangs not just from pickup trucks in the deep-red states but from a window I used to pass often in the East Village in New York. And while survivors of the Holocaust were accorded restitution after World War II, the United States has failed to issue reparations to its Black citizens for the enslavement of their ancestors as well as for the lawful, punitive discrimination and violence that continued here unchecked until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and which has endured in quieter forms ever since. The bill that would establish a committee just to examine how reparations would work was first introduced in the House of Representatives in 1989; it has failed to pass in each session since.

It is at best crude and at worst immoral to compare traumas. The Holocaust was a genocidal reign of terror that intended to and almost succeeded in wiping out a group of people for whom discrimination and persecution has been a fact of their existence for centuries. Nazis didnt just kill their victims but as the historian Timothy Ryback detailed in the New Yorker harvested them, using their remains as literal fuel to power the regime. After gassing men, women, and children, Nazis collected hair from their corpses and sold it to German companies at 20 pennies per kilo to be woven into textiles or used to line the boots of U-boat crews.

The American enslavement of Black people who were stolen from their own lands and brought to these shores beginning in 1619 predates the founding of the United States. While there was a Germany before the Holocaust and a revived democracy after it, there is no United States without slavery. America would not exist without the Black people who laid its literal foundations.

The journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones has written that Black Americans were deprived of their rights and debased in order to rationalize the extraction of profit from their bodies. Their dehumanization was so total, the historian James Whitman writes, that when the Nazis sat down to write the Nuremberg Laws that would strip Jews of their German citizenship and looked to Americas legal discrimination for inspiration, the Germans balked: The one-drop rule was too harsh for the Nazis.

Evil cant be ranked, not least because drawing false equivalences between particular horrors would, in fact, be in the Nazi tradition. Like the caretaker at Dachau, most Germans offloaded the blame for their predicament onto their enemies, even as their new government made tepid mea culpas. The United States had bombed their cities, and the Allies had flattened them. And who were the Americans with their exile and mass murder of Native Americans to lecture them? Were the Germans misdeeds really worse than other nations crimes?

But a person doesnt need to debate comparative sin to measure, as Neiman puts it in her book, comparative redemption. The fact is that German culture is suffused with the terrible knowledge of what its citizens perpetrated. In America, amnesia prevails, our textbooks and laws scrubbed of so much of what happened here.

Can we compare the processes that are meant to heal the wounds of such different historical events? asks Neiman, who is Jewish and has lived much of her adult life in Berlin. Whats clear, she answers later in her book, is that redemption for people and nations depends on the same things: guilt and atonement, remembering rather than erasing, the presence of the past in preparing for the future. No matter the crime, reconciliation requires an honest accounting.

The Germans are not alone in doing such work, although their example is perhaps most instructive because it has included political overhaul and public trials as well as cultural and financial exercises in reparations. South Africa and Rwanda have also wrestled with their grim histories. In both countries, peace advocates demanded that perpetrators appear in a public forum to detail for the record the full extent of their violence.

We can tell ourselves that the Holocaust is a singular phenomenon that no ground cries out like Auschwitz or Treblinka or Dachau. But even if thats true, that doesnt preclude our learning from the German process, however incomplete. What Germans have done, which the United States has not done thus far as a nation, Neiman says in an interview, is to be honest: We suffered, but we have caused other people to suffer more, and we have to face that. We cannot continue to cover up the crimes of our past. The fact that Germans didnt do it wholeheartedly at the beginning that can be something that gives us hope.

Atonement depends on renewed commitment; the return of anti-Semitism and far-right ideologies in the former Reich have proven as much. But is it possible to see Germans sustained effort to heal as a model? Can we hold up a mirror to ourselves and accept the repellent parts of our own reflection?

America is not unique in its refusal to do such introspection. Britain still teaches the greatness of its empire. And in Poland, the sense of grievance is so pronounced that its illegal to implicate the Polish nation in the atrocities of the Holocaust.

The late scholar Nathan Huggins noted that Americas founders made almost no direct mention of race or of the use of enslaved people in the documents that declared this nation. Their more perfect union rested on a paradox: a free people, dependent on the enslavement of those who toiled beneath them.

It is as if the Founders hoped to sanitize their creation, ridding it of a deep and awful stain, he wrote. If the evil were not mentioned or seen, it would be as if it were not there at all. But Huggins predicted that such willful blindness wouldnt last not forever. It will intrude, he cautioned, and rudely.

Untreated, the past festers, Neiman writes. In time, it becomes an open wound.

The first reparations from the German government to the people it had tried to annihilate were issued soon after the war. Its the aspect of the German effort to work off the past that people now know best. But at the time, no one wanted to call them reparations. German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer referred to the compensation as restitution in 1951, when the new West German state prepared to send more than 3 billion German marks (about $3,000 per refugee) to Israel and to individual Holocaust survivors. In the popular discourse, the word used was the rather noxious Wiedergutmachung. Its literal translation is to make things good again.

The German government paid out massive sums to its victims in a number of forms, but the distribution at the start, in particular was excruciating (and is ongoing). In one striking example that Neiman describes in her book, survivors of Auschwitz, who had to register the tattooed numbers on their arms with the German government to prove their identities, were eligible for less in reparations than former SS guards and their widows received in pensions.

No, it was not all made good.

As part of the treaties signed with the Allied powers, the entire West German nation was supposed to have undergone a denazification process. It was at best a lenient, haphazard effort. Some prominent Nazis were put on trial, Adolf Eichmann one of the architects of the Final Solution included. But just as remorseless Confederate generals became governors in the reunited America, former Nazis moved with relative ease from their wartime ranks into prestigious positions in their new state.

The judicial branch of the government was, in particular, overrun; at one point, as many as 76 percent of its officials were former Nazis. Hans Globke, one of Chancellor Adenauers most important advisers, was later found to have contributed a legal annotation to the Nuremberg Laws, sanctioning their enactment. During denazification, he had claimed to be a member of the resistance.

The notion of a zero hour is a fiction, says Thorsten Wagner, a historian who also leads a fellowship (in which I took part) that studies how people in the Nazi era became perpetrators of, or acquiescent witnesses to, mass violence. For Germans, there was no clean break with their Nazi past, not in 1945 and not in the decades that followed.

But one turning point arrived in 1968, when student protests swept German universities and similar demonstrations broke out in France and the United States. The clash took the form of a generational conflict, with children turning on their parents and wanting to know for the first time where their own families had been during the war. Its a moment that Wagner believes is overstated in the telling of German wrestling with the Holocaust.

As important as that groundswell was, he says, it often got stuck in an emotional, personal conflict within families Thanksgiving dinner, with the specter of the Nazi regime. The accusations were abstract and not focused on the victims. And few survivors were there to redirect the conversation; most had fled to other countries, as my family did in 1939.

Then, in 1979, a breakthrough: The four-part miniseries Holocaust, which had debuted in the United States, premiered for the German audience. The show, which aired in America a year after Roots, was an elevated soap opera, presenting a melodramatic retelling of Kristallnacht, the creation of Jewish ghettos, and the deportations to and internment in the concentration camps. Auschwitz survivor Elie Wiesel called it [u]ntrue, offensive, cheap: as a TV production, the film is an insult to those who perished and to those who survived.

But for Germans, it was a sensation. An estimated 20 million people one-third of the total German population tuned in to see it. Offensive as the dramatization might have been to survivors, the show represented the first act of collective remembering among the German people. After each episode was broadcast, the network held a call-in show with historians who could answer questions about the real-life events that had inspired the series, and with survivors.

The panel, wrote the historian Alf Ldtke, could not cope! Calls flooded the station with questions from anguished viewers. Thousands of people cried on the phone, Ldtke continued. And millions of spectators could or, more precisely, had to listen to dozens of unknown voices attempting to express their utter bewilderment and despair in public: How could it have been? How could it happen?

That was the beginning, Wagner says. That was the birth of a grassroots movement of a critical historical investigation. America had the civil rights movement, but this what Germans in their 20s and 30s undertook in the 1980s was different. After the show, the call for a reckoning did not come from the victims. It came from the descendants of the perpetrators.

The upheaval that followed was inescapable. In Berlin, the site of the former administrative headquarters of Nazi power was uncovered. These were the buildings in which the desktop perpetrators of the Nazi Gestapo, as historian Karen Till calls them, managed the state police and directed the Jewish genocide.

Debates broke out over what to do with the desolate land near the seam between the East and West German states. In the stalemate, activists started to dig. With the excavation of the past, Till writes in her book The New Berlin, came feelings of anger, frustration, loss, rejection, mourning, and hope.

In the rubble, the activists were looking not for exoneration but a space for their ghosts, she writes. Visiting it now, the address has retained a haunting aura. It is the site of the Topography of Terror a museum and memorial that traces the turn from the Weimar Republic into Nazism.

Such acts of exhumation were not unique to Berlin. A desire was spreading across the West German landscape to uncover the truth of a shared past. The movement was called Dig Where You Stand, and it required exertion, with artists, students, and intellectuals picking up literal shovels to sift through the dirt in search of buried traumas.

As memorials sprung up in the hundreds to commemorate these places, some realized the answers to their questions werent in the soil. Alexandra Senfft, born in 1961, was the daughter of progressive German parents. Her mothers father was Hanns Ludin, the Third Reichs envoy to Slovakia. In his role, Ludin signed the deportation orders that sent Slovak Jews to their death indisputably, although Senffts relatives have denied it. Senfft believes the past tormented her mother, and she has written books about the impact of her grandfathers Nazi ties on his children and grandchildren, and other descendants of Nazi perpetrators struggling with their tainted inheritance.

For her effort, her mothers relatives have distanced themselves from her, minimizing contact after decades of closeness. In her estimation, even now, the Nazis have been othered, as if the evil hadnt taken root in Germans own families and neighborhoods. Those who did confront the crimes of their ancestors could not have been prepared for what that realization would feel like. When the landmark Wehrmacht exhibition, which publicized the war crimes of the German armed forces during World War II, opened in Hamburg in 1995, Neiman writes, some visitors carried small photos of their fathers or grandfathers to compare with the photographs in the exhibit. Others decried the show and its dishonoring of their dead.

Its a never-ending process, Senfft says. Perhaps thats one of the reasons most of us arent eager to do what she has: Once a person has stared into the abyss, it becomes impossible to pretend its not there. I could have put the letters back into the boxes and the boxes back into the attic, but I wanted to go on. I had looked the painful facts in the face, and I knew it would haunt me if I didnt continue, she says. Sometimes, I had the image of a dark tunnel in a huge mountain, and I encouraged myself, Keep going. There will be light on the other side.

I dont think were free in America, the criminal justice reform advocate Bryan Stevenson has said. I think we are burdened.

The founder of the Equal Justice Initiative, which is committed to ending mass incarceration and excessive punishment in the United States, Stevenson was also the mastermind behind the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Alabama. The site is the first memorial to victims of racial terror in the US.

When it opened in 2018, Stevenson said he had drawn inspiration from the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin and from artist Gunter Demnigs sprawling memorial tens of thousands of brass stumbling blocks or Stolpersteine installed in cities across Europe marking on the pavement the homes from which Jews were deported under Hitler. The memorial in Alabama echoes the 2,771 concrete slabs that architect Peter Eisenman built for the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. It, too, is made of columns: 800 steel blocks suspended overhead. Each is inscribed with the name of an American county and, beneath it, the names of the people who were lynched there. Many entries read unknown.

The memorial and its environs stretched over six acres is a monument to Americas heinous history. But the ambition of the site is not punishment, as Stevenson told the New York Times in 2018. Its liberation. So, too, is the aim of working off the past: What world could we build if we understood how we arrived at this one?

In American textbooks and schools and families, the same phenomenon that Senfft described of Nazism is true. The prevailing view among white Americans is still that slavery was something that happened somewhere else, the historian Stephanie Jones-Rogers tells me. It wasnt in their streets or in their homes. It wasnt their ancestors.

That denial has shaped what we believe about our nation and ourselves. This delusional rendering of our past explains how the United States government could decide to grant reparations to slave owners in 1862 but has still not repaid the debt it owes Black Americans. It accounts for the fact that Americans aestheticize the antebellum South, even hosting their weddings on former plantations.

Marcia Chatelain, a historian and a professor at Georgetown University, notes that even as the fight for racial justice has reached the fore of American consciousness, most people are deeply ignorant of not only how pervasive slavery was, but the totality of the institution relative to the entire nation.

Chatelain was a member of Georgetowns Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation a committee convened to grapple with a sordid footnote in the institutions past. (German businesses, universities, and even the government have embarked on similar fact-finding missions.) In 1838, with the school on the brink of financial ruin, its Jesuit leadership sold 272 enslaved men, women, and children to secure the universitys future. Chatelain and the working groups 15 other members set out to find the descendants of those enslaved people and to decide what should be done to make amends. The work spoke to one of Chatelains deepest convictions: People cant seek to repair something in which they are not aware of how full the damage is.

In the fall of 2016, the group laid out a number of recommendations; in the report, the groups chair summarized what he hoped would be its legacy: that our community can say soberly and sincerely [that] this is part of our history and we take responsibility for it.

What we need is an appraisal. In her new book Caste, the Pulitzer-Prize winning author Isabel Wilkerson compares America to an old house. We can never declare the work over, she writes. Wind, flood, drought, and human upheavals batter a structure that is already fighting whatever flaws were left unattended in the original foundation.

It is a daunting proposition, but one well-known to citizens and homeowners alike: A fresh coat of paint will not hide the rot in the basement.

Even among Germans, who have done so much, if imperfect, repair work, the baseboards are showing their age. Acts of far-right extremism are on the rise. In June 2019, a regional politician who defended Chancellor Angela Merkels decision to admit more than a million refugees was shot dead. A few months later, a shooter attacked a synagogue in Halle, killing two. In the German parliament, the Alternative for Germany Party is now the first far-right political group to be seated in government since the defeat of the Nazis. Its leaders have called for a 180-degree turn in how Germans express public shame over the Holocaust.

Earlier this summer, the New York Times reported that neo-Nazis are infiltrating elite units in the German armed forces. Their takeover is so insidious and hard to trace that the German defense minister took the drastic step of disbanding an entire special forces group, hoping to weaken their network. In a poignant echo of the past, police commandos were dispatched to dig up the garden of a sergeant major in one of the nations most secretive units. Buried in the ground, they found thousands of rounds of ammunition, a crossbow, two knives and an SS songbook, 14 editions of a magazine for former members of the Waffen SS, and other Nazi memorabilia.

In the end, Arthur Kahn spent 24 hours in Dachau. He came in with a group of about 30 men, suspected of ties to communists. (He was a medical student; he had none.) Witnesses would later attest that Arthur and two other Jewish men Rudolf Benario and Ernst Goldmann, both 24 and from the town of Frth were asked to step forward upon arrival. Hilmar Wckerle, the first commandant of Dachau, ordered several guards, including one named Hans Steinbrenner, to attack them. When the guards relented, a witness reported the three men bleeding from their nose and mouth and other parts of their bodies.

The abuse continued for hours, with Steinbrenner commanding the men and an additional Jewish man named Erwin Kahn (no relation to Arthur) to shovel the trash bins outside the barracks as he beat them. What happened next is a matter of dispute, but what is understood is that Steinbrenner came back for the four men later that afternoon and handed them spades, as if to have them dig again. He took them on a march into the woods, and just after 4 pm, gunshots rang out over the camp. Arthur Kahn, Benario, and Goldmann were dead. Records stored at the Bavarian State Archives in Munich show that Erwin Kahn survived for several hours. Then he, too, died. It was April 12, 1933, and the second night of Passover.

Levi and Martha Kahn, Arthurs parents, heard the news from Bernhard Kolb, who was responsible for Jewish affairs in the small town of Gemnden am Main, where the couple lived and raised their children. Josef Hartinger, the municipal prosecutor whose position in Munich predated Hitlers rise (and who was not a Nazi, but a member of the conservative Bavarian Peoples Party), would later refute the narrative told to them: that Arthur had been shot as he tried to escape. I grew up hearing that Levi knew that Arthur hadnt run, that after hed paid to retrieve Arthurs coffin from the Nazis, he unsealed it and saw his son had been shot in the chest.

I went to Dachau last September because I wanted to find out what was true and what was lore; the stakes felt enormous. I wanted to meet with people who could tell me how Arthur had died. I knew he had been 21 at the time. I knew he had been beloved, a genius, and the great hope of his parents and siblings. I knew because one of them his brother, Herbert was my grandfather.

In the book Hitlers First Victims, the evidence of what happened to Arthur is far more explicit than what Id understood from the stories I was raised with. My grandfather, who died in 2015, named his only son for his older brother, but my father has never read the book. Leave it to the historical record; he tells me he doesnt want to know. He did look at the photos I took of the plot where Arthur is buried in Nuremberg. When the sun hits his tombstone, it looks brand new.

After the war, the town of Frth discovered that Benario and Goldmann had been members of the same rowing club, a front for communist and other banned political activities. The riverbank, where the club was based, was in disrepair, and Benario and Goldmann had planted birch trees to buttress it. Frth later installed a memorial near the trees to honor the two men.

On April 12, 2013 as the town prepared to commemorate their deaths news spread that the plaque had been defaced, the trees, standing since the 1930s, damaged, and a name smeared in bright pink letters on the ground before them: Steinbrenner, it read. Eight decades later, someone still knew the power of the name of the guard who had attacked the four Jews in Dachau.

We who want to learn from the past tend to fear forgetting most. We agonize over the reports in 2017 that four out of 10 German students dont know that Auschwitz-Birkenau was a concentration camp or the findings that fewer than 10 percent of high school seniors in the United States can identify slavery as the central cause of the Civil War. Determined as we are to remember, we think less about the fact that on private social media forums, in bars, and in secretive clubs, a new wave of extremists is remembering, too.

Real change, as Neiman writes, is a social exercise, and it is achieved in a collective. As a culture, we decide what we will not tolerate. The plaque in Frth, like the sign in Mississippi that marks the spot where Emmett Tills body was pulled from the Tallahatchie River, continues to be stolen or vandalized. The town continues to replace it. We fight hate where we see it in others, in ourselves. We hope there are enough of us to keep it from destabilizing our foundations.

Neiman has read the same articles I have about a resurgent, fanatical right-wing, but she also sees the protest and denunciation that responds to the violence. Even though Ive argued that Germany did a lot right despite the fact that they were slow at first in doing it they didnt get rid of racism or anti-Semitism entirely, Neiman says. National memory is not a fixed thing; it can shift. It can be warped. Every community needs to figure out its own way of doing this. I dont believe history runs according to absolute laws that you can figure out beforehand. I think history is made by individual human beings in different cultural and social circumstances, and thats a good thing.

Vast opportunity lies in this moment in America, Chatelain says. Old statues and old modes of thinking are tumbling. Say her name is a chant and a promise we will not forget. People are asking questions of their own families, as some Germans did a generation ago. In Tulsa, Oklahoma, excavators are looking for a possible mass grave that dates back to the 1921 Tulsa race massacre. The digging has begun.

Chatelain wishes those despairing over how much work lies ahead could see what stands to be gained a sense of safety, a sense of care, a belief that were not disposable and that were valuable, a sense that history can be a place where we draw moral courage and dont have to feel ashamed, she says. Those things are possible, but we have to do them together.

Last September, after my visit to Dachau, I took a train from Munich to Gemnden am Main. My older brother and I had decided to go, wondering about the childhood home where the four Kahn children Arthur, Fanny, Herbert, and Lothar grew up. (I looked up what portion of the population voted for the far-right AfD party in the last election: one in 10.)

The town is small, and the streets are lined in cobblestones. In the pavement, a few of the stones glint gold Stolpersteine for the Jews evicted from their homes. One was placed for Fanny Weinberg, our great-aunt. She and her son Nathan were deported to Minsk and killed in 1941. Stones for Nathan and for Arthur are due to be installed in 2021.

A few minutes after we arrived, we found the house, which stands just as it did when our grandfather might have read or run outside, except a restaurant has replaced the store Levi Kahn used to operate out of the ground floor.

Down the street, in the tourist office, we faced a wall of pamphlets advertising historical interest sites and local attractions: bike trails, hot air balloon rides and one stamped with Arthurs face. It took us a few minutes to explain to the woman behind the desk who we were, but when she realized, she clasped our hands and cried. She told us students at the local high school had made the brochure as part of their Holocaust curriculum. Its filled with short entries on the towns long-gone Jews.

Above the portrait of Arthur, the words Wir wollen erinnern were printed in white: We want to remember.

Mattie Kahn is the culture director of Glamour. Her work has also appeared in Elle, Vogue, BuzzFeed, and more.

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Slavery and racism haunt the US still. Could Germanys model for Holocaust remembrance be the answer? - Vox.com

SPLC Investigation Finds American White Nationalist Group Tied to Kremlin Advocate with Shady Funding – Southern Poverty Law Center

Posted By on October 8, 2020

Montgomery, Ala. An investigation published by Southern Poverty Law Centers Hatewatch today found that the influential U.S. white nationalist group The Right Stuff (TRS) has significant links to Charles Bausman, a notorious pro-Kremlin propagandist with shady funding and ties to a Russian oligarch.

The report written by Senior Investigative Reporter Michael Edison Hayden shows that an email address ending with a Russian domain name is referenced across the source code of a network of three extreme, far-right websites that primarily operate in the U.S. All three websites, Russia-Insider.com (Russia Insider), National-Justice.com (National Justice), and Truthtopowernews.com (Truth to Power News) have featured bylines by members of the TRS. These three sites traffic in political disinformation and denigrate Jewish people, women, non-white people, LGBTQ people and leftists. In some cases, the websites publish overlapping material, like when members of TRS announced the formation of a self-described political party in August 2020.

We have seen the Trump administration downplay both white supremacy and Russias involvement in American affairs, said Hayden. This report shows that we ignore the reality of these issues at our own peril. The Right Stuff radicalized a State Department official. They helped plan and promote the Unite the Right rally that descended on Charlottesville in August 2017. If they are receiving material assistance from a foreign power, or people acting on behalf of a foreign power, its a major scandal.

TRS has helped planned and promoted the United the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 and has also promoted the candidacy of Donald Trump in 2016 through podcasts and traffics in Holocaust denial and other antisemitic conspiracy theories. The group is also the same white nationalist organization for which U.S. State Department Official Matthew Q. Gebert covertly recruited members, as Hatewatch first reported in 2019.

White Nationalist and Holocaust denier Michael Enoch Peinovich founded TRS. Hatewatch had reached out to Peinovichs lawyer for a comment about the report but did not receive a response.

Read the investigative story here.

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SPLC Investigation Finds American White Nationalist Group Tied to Kremlin Advocate with Shady Funding - Southern Poverty Law Center

Online giants removing anti-Semitic content in Spanish watchdog – The Times of Israel

Posted By on October 8, 2020

BUENOS AIRES Google, Facebook and YouTube are successfully removing large percentages of the anti-Semitic content in Spanish from their platforms, a Buenos Aires-based watchdog has found.

The Web Observatory, or Observatorio Web a joint initiative between the Latin American Jewish Congress, a regional branch of the World Jewish Congress; the DAIA political umbrella organization for Argentinas Jewish community; and the AMIA Jewish community center released a report September 25 on the prevalence of online anti-Semitism in Spanish. In 2016, about 30% of Spanish-language online search results for the word Jew Judio in Spanish contained anti-Semitic content. That figure is now down to about 3%, the report finds.

The quantity of anti-Semitic content in the top 10 results of a Google search for the term alone has dropped by 50% over the past year.

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Spanish is the second most popular language used on Facebook, and about 30% of the content mentioning Jews on the platform in Spanish involves anti-Semitism, the report found. Within the anti-Semitic content, about 65% of it involved the word Zionism, and about 40% involved the word Israel.

Israel and Zionism are the vehicles for anti-Semitism online, this is a consolidated trend, the report states.

In the case of YouTube, Observatorio Web identified 500 videos in Spanish espousing Holocaust denial, which YouTube has now taken down.

The companies are starting to work against hate speech, but there is still a lot to do yet, Obervatorio Web Director Ariel Siedler told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Online giants removing anti-Semitic content in Spanish watchdog - The Times of Israel

Opinion: Young people think Holocaust education is important – The Cincinnati Enquirer

Posted By on October 8, 2020

Sarah Weiss, Opinion contributor Published 12:50 a.m. ET Oct. 2, 2020

Eighth grade students from St. Joseph School in Cold Springs, Ky., touch a relief image created with bullet casings at the Holocaust & Humanity Center inside the Cincinnati Museum Center in Cincinnati on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020.(Photo: Sam Greene/The Enquirer)

A survey released earlier this monthfound that 80%of millennial respondents believe it is important to continue teaching about the Holocaust.

While this aspect of the survey reflects a willingness and commitment to learn from the past on the part of millennials, the general public and media chose to focus on different aspects of the survey like the fact that almost two-thirds of millennials and Gen Zers do not know that sixmillion Jews were killed in the Holocaust,and almost half do not know the name of any concentration camp.

Social media erupted with comments calling young Americans lack of knowledge, "stunning,""disappointing,"and "a shameful example of how ignorant and insensitive Americans have become."

The survey, commissioned by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, compounded by recent incidents of Holocaust denial on Facebook and the trivialization of survivors on Tik Tok, paints a depressing picture. Will our younger generations fail to ensure the lessons of the Holocaust are remembered in the decades to come?

A display showing the time periods during the Holocaust is shown in the new Holocaust and Humanity Center at the Cincinnati Museum Center in the Queensgate neighborhood of Cincinnati on Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2019. The new exhibit covering the events before, during and after the Holocaust will be open to the public Jan. 27.(Photo: Sam Greene, The Enquirer)

As the chief executive officer of the Nancy & David Wolf Holocaust & Humanity Center, I feel like so many others the deep and sobering concern that our country is teetering toward a state where antisemitism and hate-crime incidents are widely tolerated. While these types of surveys and the lack of Holocaust knowledge should be cause for concern, I believe wholeheartedly that young people want to learn from the past and create a better future.

I have been doing this work for more than 15 years and, as the Holocaust & Humanity Center prepares to commemorate its 20th anniversary later this month, here is what I know: The lessons of one of the darkest chapters of humanity are not lost on young Americans.

Another survey, published just two weeks ago by Echoes & Reflections, found that college students who learned about the Holocaust in high school reported a greater willingness to challenge intolerant behavior in others and showed higher critical thinking skills and a greater sense of social responsibility and civic efficacy.

We know this to be true locally. Throughout the years, I have had the privilege of working with hundreds of area educators who share compelling stories about the impact of Holocaust education on their students. And while foot traffic in the museum is understandably down due to the pandemic, what excites me most is a visitor trend groups of teens are coming through the museum with their friends without a parent or teacher guiding them to do so.

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At the beginning of the pandemic, we transitioned our in-person Holocaust Speaker Series to Zoom. Local survivors and their families tell their personal stories every Wednesday to attendees located across the city, countryand even the world.

Ninety-two percent of surveyed attendees said they feel a responsibility to stand up to hate and antisemitism after watching one of our programs. We know that sharing the lessons of the Holocaust can change hearts and minds even those who are susceptible to fringe beliefs spread by white supremacist groups. After one of our webinars featuring a local survivor, an attendee messaged me and said: "I actually had doubts that the Holocaust happened because of other readings. Now, I know."

Alarmist reports highlighting the flaws in our education system do not address the issues we face, and those reports downplay the important work that educators are already doing. Even in the past six months, I have been inspired by the local students and teachers who have remained committed to our mission despite the challenging circumstances we are living through today.

Gallery guide Pat Hopson leads a class of eighth graders from St. Jospeh School at the Holocaust & Humanity Center inside the Cincinnati Museum Center in Cincinnati on Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2020.(Photo: Sam Greene/The Enquirer)

There is work to do, but Holocaust education is effective and young people believe it is important. It is up to all of us to ensure the next generation learns from the lessons of the past. While we need to encourage school systems to include Holocaust education within their curriculums, we can also take personal ownership over our own learning experiences. Locally, you and your family have the resources to learn about this history spend an afternoon immersing yourself in the stories of local survivors at our museum at Union Terminal or attend one of our online programs about the Holocaust.

Before her passing, local Holocaust survivor Lusia Hornstein said, "I owe it to all those who did not survive to tell the story." We owe it to Lusia to carry these stories forward and ensure that future generations do the same.

Sarah L. Weiss ischief executive officer of the Nancy & David Wolf Holocaust & Humanity Center.

Sarah Weiss(Photo: Provided)

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Opinion: Young people think Holocaust education is important - The Cincinnati Enquirer

Jews in Congress beset by online hate, new ADL report says J. – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on October 8, 2020

Jewish members of Congress have been subjected to a deluge of online hate speech this summer, according to a new Anti-Defamation League report, including aggressive and offensive tweets with antisemitic themes from time-honored tropes about global conspiracy to claims about Jews financing the Black Lives Matter movement.

The report, prepared by the ADLs Center for Technology and Society in Silicon Valley and released Tuesday, offers a snapshot of the online harassment that Jewish politicians face, and the challenges in tracking it.

Social media platforms are breeding grounds for hate and antisemitism at a frightening scale, and as very public and sometimes polarizing figures, Jewish members of Congress often experience the worst of this on Twitter, ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement.

The report surveyed a month of Twitter messages that mentioned incumbent Jewish senators and representatives, including Sen. Chuck Schumer and Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York and Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California. The center examined some 6,000 tweets between July 23 and Aug. 22. Ten percent were found to contain direct antisemitism or antisemitic tropes.

Of those tweets, about half questioned the politicians loyalty to the United States, while close to 40 percent involved conspiracy theories around the billionaire liberal philanthropist George Soros. Fifteen percent were related to the conspiracy theory that Jews secretly control media and finance (tweets could fall into more than one category).

The two biggest targets were Schumer and Nadler, with Feinstein coming in a distant third.

Only 7 percent of the tweets contained direct antisemitic language, the report said. The rest were less explicit, but still clear to their intended audiences, using terms like globalist, anti-goyim media and even Bolshevik tribesman.

While some social media platforms are getting better at finding and removing hate speech Facebook announced in August that it would ban posts about Jews controlling the world after a boycott that the ADL helped lead on other platforms so-called dog whistles easily slide through. And the lack of transparency on these platforms makes this kind of speech hard to track and shut down.

Its important to release publications like the OHI Election Report to keep the general public, policy makers and technology companies informed about the virality and nature of hate and harassment online, Dave Sifry, vice president at CTS, said in an email to J. Public reports of this nature also allow us to continue improving the toolset and analytical rigor of our research.

The report uses the CTS online hate index, an artificial intelligence tool that uses machine learning to analyze and identify hate speech. But the tweets were also reviewed by researchers, who labeled them in a variety of ways: Holocaust denial, deep state references, use of the so-called echo symbol, or triple parentheses, to reference Jewish names, and comparing Jews to rats, Nazis, Communists, Marxists and Bolsheviks.

Not only national politicians are being targeted on social media. While not part of the ADL survey, state Sen. Scott Wiener has been the recent target of antisemitic and homophobic vitriol after sponsoring a bill to reform sex offender registration, with more than 10,000 hateful attacks pouring into Wieners inbox and social media accounts since August (including some sent to his elderly parents, his office said).

The report recommends that social media companies independently establish comprehensive, precise methods to identify not only antisemitism but all offensive language targeted at minorities, a necessary first step before hate speech can be taken off the platforms successfully. The report also asks lawmakers to encourage these companies to adopt greater transparency for the good of society as a whole.

While Twitter has taken myriad steps to deal with hate speech that violates their terms of service, theyre not identifying or removing this blatant antisemitism quickly enough, Greenblatt said. Twitter must enforce their rules and remove such content swiftly and consistently.

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Jews in Congress beset by online hate, new ADL report says J. - The Jewish News of Northern California

Let’s Talk about Tik Tok Antisemitism against Our Youth – The Times of Israel

Posted By on October 8, 2020

Online antisemitism is nothing new but now it seems to be widely targeting our vulnerable youth more than ever before. Hidden under false identities, haters freely reveal prejudice, bigotry, and antisemitic views across virtually all the unruled space of social media.

Teenagers who identify as Jewish complain of constant hostility on platforms such as Tik Tok, which are increasingly popular among youth. What would be the best way for them to react and deal with this? First of all, understanding what lies behind such hatred will empower them to turn the hostility into acceptance and embrace.

Since the beginning of 2020, more than a staggering 380,000 videos and over 64,000 hateful comments have been removed in the US alone for violating hate speech policies, according to Tik Tok officials. But the reality shows that although some efforts are being aimed at controlling online hostility, this poison rapidly renews itself and spreads worldwide like a virus.

Young American Jews say that in the past when they uploaded content to the platform without disclosing their background they received rave comments, but as soon as they revealed the fact that they are Jewish, the compliments turned into insults and antisemitic outbursts. The comments they continue to receive include praises for Hitler, Nazi salutes, anti-Israel jabs, and Holocaust denial. Tik Tok also recently faced controversy over history trivialization due to a Holocaust challenge that appeared on the app in which users flippantly portrayed themselves as concentration camp victims.

Such controversies and antisemitic manifestations are eye-openers to peoples true nature and sentiments toward Jews. Therefore, it is important they are revealed. It is as futile to bury our heads in the sand about this as it is trying to escape Judaism, leaving our youth rootless and without a sense of belonging anywhere. The disclosure of hatred can be a positive thing if it awakens in young Jews the vital question of why the Jew-hatred exists. Only an understanding of the foundation of this phenomena and an awareness of what the world expects from Jews can provide young Jews with the basis for solving the problem of antisemitism.

How to React?

Jew-hatred is irrational, so a war of words or altercations are worthless. Antisemitism by character requires no justification, although one will always be found. Many believe the hatred stems from envy: Jews are smart, successful, and innovative; they control the media, the entertainment industry, banks, and commerce. But these are no more than superficial rationalizations that both we and our haters use in order to justify the animosity. The root of the animosity is much deeper than that.

Humanity instinctively feels that the Jewish people hold the key to a better world. Why the Jews? And why the increasing pressure now? The Hebrew word for Jew [Yehudi] comes from the word for united [yihud]. Unity is the very essence of our people which was established according to the tenet, love your friend as yourself in order to become a light unto the nations. As the world endures escalating divisions and conflicts, there is a subconscious expectation that Jews should unite and be like a conduit to funnel this positive unifying force from nature to the whole world.

The problem is that we have completely lost awareness of the importance of our Jewish unity, and instead, frictions and separation prevail. And the more that people of the world feel problems and crises stemming from the divisiveness in human society, the more they will subconsciously feel that Jews are to blame.

Antisemitism thus surfaces as a natural phenomenon among the nations of the world in order to pressure Jewish people to unite. In other words, by becoming a good example to the world of positive connection, harmony, and support, the general attitude toward a unified Jewish people will become favorable and encouraging, and confidence within society at large will rise. Now that we realize that we hold the key to a good future for our own youth and the entire world, it is time for us to walk the talk.

Michael Laitman is a PhD in Philosophy and Kabbalah. MSc in Medical Bio-Cybernetics. Founder and president of Bnei Baruch Kabbalah Education & Research Institute. Author of over 40 books on spiritual, social and global transformation. His new book, The Jewish Choice: Unity or Anti-Semitism, is available on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Jewish-Choice-Anti-Semitism-Historical-anti-Semitism/dp/1671872207/

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Let's Talk about Tik Tok Antisemitism against Our Youth - The Times of Israel

Who are the ‘Proud Boys’? – IJN – Intermountain Jewish News

Posted By on October 8, 2020

NEW YORK Who are the Proud Boys, the far-right group that Donald Trump name-checked at the first presidential debate this week? And do they hate Jews?

Members of the Proud Boys in Portland, Ore., Aug. 17, 2019. (Alex Milan Tracy/Anadolu Agency/Getty)

At the debate Tuesday night, Sept. 29, moderator Chris Wallace asked Trump whether he would condemn white supremacists from the debate stage. He did not. What he did say, amid denunciations of the far-left Antifa, was this:

Proud Boys, stand back and stand by, but Ill tell you what, somebodys gotta do something about Antifa and the left because this is not a right-wing problem, this is a left-wing problem.

The group Trump referred to, the Proud Boys, is a far-right, western chauvinist fraternal organization founded by Gavin McInnes that supports Trump and has engaged in street violence.

Anti-Semitism is not core to the groups ideology, but according to the ADL, the group has allied with white supremacists, and McInnes has made a series of virulently anti-Semitic statements. The ADL estimates that it has several hundred members.

A former member of the Proud Boys, Jason Kessler, was the primary organizer of the 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, which Joe Biden again criticized for its anti-Semitism during the debate.

Chapters of the Proud Boys have marched with neo-Nazis on other occasions as well.

Just as members of the Boogaloo Bois, another far-right group, frequently wear Hawaiian shirts, the Proud Boys have adopted a quasi-uniform, in their case a black polo shirt with yellow trim produced by the British company Fred Perry.

Late last week, the company announced that it would stop selling the shirts and issued a forceful statement reiterating its top executives previous condemnation of the Proud Boys.

Fred Perry, the Englishman who founded the company in 1952, started a business with a Jewish businessman from Eastern Europe. Its a shame we even have to answer questions like this. No, we dont support the ideals or the group that you speak of. It is counter to our beliefs and the people we work with, John Flynn, the companys chair, said in 2017 and again in the new statement.

And, in case anyone has any doubts, the Proud Boys are a virulent strain of American right-wing extremism, ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted on Tuesday night, following the debate. They have a long track record of violence, including in Portland this past weekend.

McInnes went on an anti-Semitic rant in 2017, in which he defended Holocaust denial and repeated anti-Semitic stereotypes in a video he originally titled 10 things I hate about the Jews.

I felt myself defending the super far-right Nazis just because I was sick of so much brainwashing and I felt like going, Well, they never said it didnt happen. What theyre saying is it was much less than six million and that they starved to death and werent gassed, that they didnt have supplies, he said, before adding, Im not saying it wasnt gassing.

He also blamed Jews for Josef Stalins starvation of millions of Ukrainians. I think it was 10 million Ukrainians who were killed, he said.

That was by Jews. That was by Marxist, Stalinist, left-wing, commie, socialist Jews.

He then said Jews have a whiny paranoid fear of Nazis.

Related

Excerpt from:

Who are the 'Proud Boys'? - IJN - Intermountain Jewish News


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