This past summer, thanks to the JewishFoundation for the Righteous, I had the opportunity to travel to Germany and
Poland to visit a number of Holocaust historical sites. On the trip I picked up
a number of terrific resources. One in particular is entitled, Auschwitz-Birkenau:The Place Where You Are Standing.... It follows the concept of the books
with photos from the past next to those from the present taken from the same
vantage point. In this case the present day photographer, Pawel Sawicki,
attempted to match the photos from the Auschwitz Album. The decision to
purchase this book was quick and easy. Of all the interesting places we visited
I found myself drawn more to Auschwitz-Birkenau. I also like the then and now
type photo books. In addition, I use a number of the photos from the Auschwitz
Album when I teach about Auschwitz. Finally, the photographer was our tour
guide for part of our visit to Auschwitz and he discussed the process of
matching the present views with those in the past photos. It is available on
the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum website. I highly recommend buying
this book for both personal and professional use.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Number the Stars as performed at the Coterie Theatre
Lois
Lowry won her first Newbery Award for this book set in Denmark during the
Holocaust. The book explores many universal themes including bravery,
friendship, and human decency as well as Holocaust topics including rescuers,
hiding, perpetrators, resistance, and antisemitism. While the book’s focus is
on the two young friends, Annemarie and Ellen, the play is often focused on a
young member of the Resistance. Peter (who would have been Annemarie’s
brother-in-law had her sister not been killed in her work with the Resistance)
provides important details about the history of Denmark and the work of the Resistance
members there.
The play
is well-acted. Actresses a bit older than their characters convincingly play
the three young girls. The supporting cast is believable in their roles as
either perpetrators or rescuers. The set is a simple but fascinating one. On
the stage are a table, chairs, and a trunk. But the backdrop is constantly
changed to show a variety of settings using wall-sized Etch-A-Sketch-like
drawings. The audience of middle-school students was fully engaged in the
action. The hour-length play was well-written and represented the key concepts
and characters in the book very closely.
Like
Laura Patton (see her January 17 post), I would prefer to use non-fiction over
novels or historical fiction. But there are many effective ways to use a book
like Number the Stars (a quick,
engaging read for most 6-8th grade students). Students can study the
literary aspects of the book, how the author researched and incorporated the
history of the Holocaust in Denmark, and then research the historical aspects
themselves. Once students research events presented in the book, they become
interested in knowing about other, related events and people.
MCHE, as
the education partner of The Coterie Theatre for this play, provides Number
the Stars Educational Materials.
There
are dozens of online sites providing educational activities to use with the
book. Carol
Hurst's Children's Literature Site provides discussion ideas, activities,
and related books. This is one site that shows creative ways to incorporate a
novel into historical curriculum.
Lois
Lowry's Blog provides useful insights about the book and her research.
In the
Afterword of the book, Lowry addresses the question “How much of Annemarie’s
story is true?” This is a wonderful section to use with students to pique their
interest in the history portrayed in the book. The playwright (Douglas W.
Larche) uses this section to create a moving letter from Peter read at the end
of the play:
“… the dream for you all, young and
old, must be to create an ideal of human decency, and not a
narrow-minded and prejudiced one. That is the great
gift that our country hungers for, something
every little peasant boy can look forward to, and with pleasure feel he is a part of — something he can work and fight
for.”
I think
there are many teachable moments and valuable concepts in this book and
in the play that can easily lead to a study of the history of the Holocaust and
the memoirs, poetry, and artwork of its victims.
Labels:
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Thursday, January 17, 2013
Choosing the best instructional books for young readers
A
friend and I were recently discussing Holocaust books for young adults. During
our conversation, she mentioned The
Devil’s Arithmetic by Jane Yolen. I told her that I dislike The Devil’s Arithmetic. In fact, I wish
that my son’s middle school did not offer it as an option for literature
circles. Of course my friend asked me why I felt this way. It occurred to me
that my answer might make a good blog entry.
To
begin, let me state that there are other of Yolen’s books that I enjoy and
believe are worth teaching. The Devil’s
Arithmetic just isn’t one of them. The novel is an odd combination of historical
fiction and fantasy that tells the story of a Jewish girl named Hannah. At the
start of the novel as her family shares stories during a Seder meal, Hannah
feels the ennui typical of teenagers. During the evening, Hannah opens the door
of her home and is transported back in time to 1942 Poland. The reader follows Hannah
through the remainder of the novel as she attempts to survive as a Jew under
Nazi occupation. Absurd premise? I thought so. Reading the book didn’t sway my
opinion.
I
wouldn’t stop a young person from choosing The
Devil’s Arithmetic for pleasure reading, even though I think there are
better choices. My primary objection to the book stems from the fact that some
schools choose it for instruction; this lends legitimacy to the novel it
doesn’t deserve. The time-travel element of The
Devil’s Arithmetic s is contrived and trivializes the subject. The
Holocaust and fantasy do not mix well.
For
upper elementary readers, Lois Lowry’s novel Number the Stars is a fine choice. Generally speaking, however, my
position is that there are so many excellent Holocaust memoirs, biographies,
and non-fiction options, I simply don’t see why a novel is necessary or
justified as an instructional choice. A sampling of my non-fiction favorites
for grades 7-9 are listed below. I invite you to respond to this blog with
suggestions of your own favorite books for teaching the Holocaust to secondary
students.
Dry Tears: The
Story of a Lost Childhood by Nechama Tec
This is the true story of how
eleven-year-old Nechama and her family were hidden by Polish Christians.
Because Nechama could most easily “pass” as Christian, she was sent out to sell
bread to help support her family. This is a suspenseful story that illustrates
the dangers for Jews in Nazi-occupied Poland and the conflicting motivations of
Poles who chose to help their Jewish neighbors.
Behind the Secret
Window: A Memoir of a Hidden Childhood During World War Two by Nelly S.
Toll
Nelly was only eight-years-old in 1943
when she and her mother went into hiding with a Polish couple. To keep Nelly
occupied and quiet during the long and boring days, she was supplied with
materials to paint and keep a diary. Twenty-nine of these childhood paintings
illustrate this memoir.
Four Perfect
Pebbles: A Holocaust Story by Lila Perl and Marion Blumenthal Lazan
I don’t feel that the Holocaust should
be taught to students as young as sixth grade. If your school’s curriculum
mandates that instruction begin at that age, this book would be a good choice.
The book tells the story of the Blumenthall family and features two sections of
historical photos, family photos, and photos of family documents. The
Blumenthals are German Jews. Like Anne Frank’s family, they sense danger when
Hitler comes to power and emigrate to the Netherlands. Eventually, of course,
they are trapped. This is a “happy” Holocaust book in the sense that all four
family members manage to stay together throughout their ordeal and survive to
liberation. The story follows the family members through their resettlement to
life in the United States. There is a companion video called Marion’s Triumph.
Surviving
Hitler: A Boy in the Nazi Death Camps by Andrea Warren
This book is a favorite because it tells
the story of Jack Mandelbaum, a Kansas City area Holocaust survivor and a
co-founder of the Midwest Center for Holocaust Education. The award-winning
author, Andrea Warren, lives in Prairie Village, Kansas. Jack endured several
slave labor camps and the loss of almost all of his family members. However, he
does not lose his humanity. His love of people suffuses the text and makes it a
wonderful choice for middle schoolers. Jack’s testimony is available on video
from MCHE.
All But My
Life: A Memoir by Gerda Weissmann Klein
A striking characteristic of this memoir
is the elegance of the language. Klein wrote it in English – her third or
fourth language. Gerda endures imprisonment in her own home, relocation to a
ghetto, and slave labor in several different camps. Toward the end of the war,
Gerda is forced on a death march. This is a compelling story and has a
companion film titled One Survivor
Remembers which won an Academy Award.
In My Hands:
Memoirs of a Holocaust Rescuer by Irene Gut Opduke with Jennifer Armstrong
Irene Gut was a seventeen-year-old
Polish girl when WWII began. She was forced to work for the German army as a
waitress and eventually as a housekeeper for a Nazi major. Against all odds,
she successfully hid twelve Jews in the basement of the major’s home until the
end of the war. In My Hands is the
story of the sacrifices Irene made to save these lives.
The Life and
Death of Adolf Hitler by James Cross Giblin
I realize this may seem like an odd
choice. Every year I have at least one middle school student who is fascinated
with Adolf Hitler; you may also have students with this interest. This is the
book I would recommend you hand to them. Giblin won the Robert F. Siebert Medal for this text which is given annually to the author(s) and
illustrator(s) of the most distinguished informational book published in the
United States in English. The book is even-handed and does not glorify
Hitler in any way. It dispels many common myths about the man and addresses his
destructive legacy.
Labels:
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Surviving Hitler
Teaching Anne Frank – The Whole Story
Many middle school English teachers teach some version of
the story of Anne Frank to their kids.
In Shawnee Mission, we teach the play version of the diary. Most of us remember Anne as being our first
introduction to the Holocaust. She is
someone that students can easily identify with, and also someone who students
can admire for her strength of character and insight into the world. However, if you teach only Anne’s diary, or
some form of it like the play, students are not really getting a Holocaust
story. They are getting a wonderful
story of a girl who is in hiding, during the Holocaust. I feel it is important for teachers to teach
their students what happened to Anne and her family before they went into
hiding and after, in order for them to see who she really was and what was
really happening to her and the millions of other victims of the Holocaust.
One excellent resource, in my opinion, is the movie Anne Frank: The Whole Story (2001). This was a miniseries which is now available
in its entirety on DVD. It was made
without actually using the diary – the Anne Frank Foundation did not allow them
to use her actual words. However, it is
based on several other biographies and testimony of people who knew her or
shared experiences with her. This movie
is in three parts. Part 1 tells of their
life before Hitler came to power in Amsterdam, all the way through to their
going into hiding. I have found it to be
an excellent way for the kids to understand how their lives changed once Hitler
came into power, the family dynamics before they are forced to live in hiding,
and who Anne really was, apart from her diary entries.
Part 2 is the story of their hiding. We watch this after we have read the
play. My advanced students read the play
as well as about 5 diary entries, so they can see how the play was different
than the actual diary. While it follows the basic story line of the
play, it shows in more detail the dynamics of the people living there and just
how hard it was. It also includes all
four of the helpers, rather than just Miep and Mr. Kraler in the play. I have found it to be a great supplement to
reading the diary or play. The kids can
see everything a little more realistically than the play, and from more than
just Anne’s perspective in the diary.
Part 3 tells the story of what happened to them after they
were caught. To me, this is the most
important part of the story that we don’t talk about. So many people think of Anne’s life only in
hiding. They don’t know (and probably
don’t want to know) what happened to her in the camps. I think it is important to understand how terribly
difficult the remainder of her life was, and how strong she did stay despite
the conditions. I also think it’s
important to put the diary and play into perspective. I have my students think about her most
famous line, “I still believe people are good at heart,” and analyze whether
that is an accurate statement of Anne’s whole life, or just how she was feeling
at the time. Would she have said that in
Bergen Belsen?
The film is long; there definitely is merit in showing
portions of it rather than the whole thing.
However, if time allows, I have found that the students get so much more
from seeing the whole film in conjunction with reading the diary and/or play,
and there is so much that you can teach while watching the film.
Labels:
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Nazis and aliens...
I happened to be up late recently grading essays when a
television show came on titled, “Unsealed:
Alien Files.” In it, they claim
to be “unearthing the biggest secret on planet Earth,” and proceed to start
saying that the Nazis had alien technology that enabled them to become the
world power they did before and during the war.
I could not believe my eyes and ears.
After I closed my open mouth, my first response was to want to write the
station to tell them how I could not believe they would be so irresponsible as
to air such a ridiculous story. But,
then, I remembered that there were all types of “reality” television shows on that
attract such “fringe” viewers to them.
Some of the “experts” who were featured on the show were publishers of
UFO Magazine and the web site TheBlackVault.com, which I obviously do not subscribe to or visit, or I would have already known that Hitler
was trying to build a time machine.
My most pressing
concern was that Holocaust deniers would use something like this to say that
the Holocaust did not happen, that people were not responsible for the
atrocities that happened, and that the truth was unknown. Sometimes, it is difficult for me to
understand how anyone could deny the Holocaust happened, and then I see this on
television, and I think anything is possible.
However, there is more evidence that the Holocaust happened than I saw
evident on the show that aliens helped the Nazis rise to power during World War
II. This is once again validation that
Holocaust education is so important to make sure that people know the
truth. I just hope I was the only person
watching this show.
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