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воскресенье 24 февраля admin 22
Yesterday was International Holocaust Remembrance Day. When the United Nations created this day, it called on countries to develop curricula that would not only keep the memory of what happened alive, but would serve as a way to prevent genocide from happening again.
And yet we know genocide still exists. We also know ignorance exists. I can’t help but wonder if it isn’t time to rethink how we teach what we teach so that calls for “Never Again” can actually ring true.
We hear the statistics. Up to a and a know little about the Holocaust or don’t believe that six millions Jews were systematically killed. Joachim West wanted people to empathize more and chose from the era to colorize while Marina Amaral used from Auschwitz. Both understand the importance of driving something home. Recent news about which offered detailed information about Jews in the United States and Canada may also strike a chord with some North Americans that “Hey, that could’ve been me.” But these are not systematic ways of teaching.
This issue at hand does not have to do only with Jewish populations decimated during the Holocaust. During World War Two,.
Nor does it have to do only with that era. I’ve only recently learned about the perpetrated on the people of the Congo Free State by Belgium’s during the late 1800s.
He pillaged the country for its rubber; those who did not meet quotas were brutalized, had body parts removed, were killed. Ultimately, eight to 10 million Congolese were murdered. I do not remember learning about this in school. A few years ago, I also learned how the and how the United States’ forced relocation led to between an eighth to half of the native Americans perishing. While I do remember being given a choice of reading two works of fiction in 11 th grade American History and choosing by Dee Brown which covers the Trail of Tears, I must admit the story didn’t stay with me. This past year I saw some articles shared on Facebook about the amazing effort Rwanda put into overcoming the aftereffects of the genocide that tore its society apart. I remember the horror when it happened nearly 25 years ago.
Former Union Catholic star Sydney McLaughlin turning pro Boys Track. Boys track and field: Antonio Tarantino of Paul VI wins the 200 at the Meet. East Orange's Akeem Lindo posts N.J. #1 to win 110 hurdles at Meet of Champions.
Hutus slaughtered nearly a million Tutsis in three months’ time. And yet the sheer number of comments by people from many corners of the earth who’d never heard of it rattled me. How many others have no idea what the in the late 1970s, when they killed over a million people in a state-sponsored genocide?
Are these events not taught? And if they are, why aren’t lessons sticking? Genocide, slavery, refugee crises, persecution and prejudice all tie into the same human elements. People deciding that others matter less than they do. Dehumanization and cruelty.