"Resistance and war": The Holocaust in American Jewish Education, 1945-1960. "Resistance and war": The Holocaust in American Jewish Education, 1945-1960.

"Resistance and war": The Holocaust in American Jewish Education, 1945-1960‪.‬

American Jewish History 2003, June, 91, 2

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Publisher Description

In The World Over Storybook, a textbook published in 1952 and used widely in American Jewish schools throughout the early postwar period, Reuben Davis recounted the Jewish experience under Nazism in a story entitled "Hannah Szenes, She Fought for Freedom," writing that "Hannah Szenes was a Palestinian girl who died during the war.... She willingly left the freedom she found in Palestine to return to Nazi-held Europe. She knew she might die if she were caught, and she did not want to die. But she gave her life so that freedom-loving people everywhere might live." (1) Textbook author Mordecai H. Lewittes echoed this theme in his 1957 Highlights of Jewish History: "Among those who have been added to the long list of Jewish heroes are the Jews of the Warsaw Ghetto. 'Whether we live or die is not important,' they said, 'but how we live and how we die.'" (2) These quotations capture the most salient feature of American Jewish education's treatment of the Holocaust from 1945 to the beginning of the Eichmann affair in 1960. (3) Jewish history textbooks, play collections, children's literature, and curricular materials published in the United States in the 1940s and 1950s frequently presented selective versions of wartime events, revolving almost exclusively around narratives of Jewish heroes and heroines. According to these accounts--most often describing the uprising in the Warsaw ghetto, the life of Hannah Senesh, and Jewish rescue efforts in Palestine--the Holocaust represented Jewry's strength, victory, and courage more than its victimization, vulnerability, and suffering. Educational materials stressed acts of physical resistance and rescue and emphasized the initiative and self-reliance exhibited by Jews during the Second World War. The loss of six million Jews between 1939 and 1945 recedes into the background of these accounts; the lesson of the Holocaust according to these narratives is that Jews in Europe took control of their own fate and helped to defeat Nazism.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2003
1 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
48
Pages
PUBLISHER
American Jewish Historical Society
SIZE
242.2
KB

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