bzarcher: A Sylveon from Pokemon floating in the air, wearing a pair of wingtip glasses (Illpala)
[personal profile] bzarcher
So I was looking around campus in the midst of running around to deal with a) Mail server failure, b) Router failure, and c) copier failure.

Saw a poster for another series of holocaust talks, and how some people were shaking their heads and talking about getting 'too much' holocaust.

And that lead me to a somewhat chilling thought: Is it possible that people have put so much effort into the 'never again' school of thought that future generations have been totally desensitized to what the holocaust was and represents? That so much has been hammered home that people...just don't care?

Do educators perhaps need to back off a bit? Should the holocaust history be carefully husbanded in public education for times when it will give the most shock value, and make the greatest impression?

Or are my fears baseless, and we should continue a pervasive method of teaching it? (I started getting holocaust history + pictures in, I believe, 5th grade. Every year following, it came up. When did you guys start being exposed?)

Date: 2003-11-10 02:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bzarcher.livejournal.com
My grand-aunt still shows her grand and great-grandchildren the tatoo on her arm. Shows it to all the kids in the family she can see. Every year she gets weaker, and the skin more and more like parchment, and I realize she won't be here much longer.

But I also think you (and I, to a lesser extent), got the better education, because we saw it, touched it, and had it explained to us by those deepest affected, not some bored blonde talking in front of a classroom. I think the problem isn't even that kids aren't close, it's that the teaching has gotten mechanical rather than emotional.

Date: 2003-11-11 12:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] degraine.livejournal.com
Cut 'n' pasted from Lateline's archive, 17/5.

'Alec Campbell's death last night ended the last tangible connection to a battle on a distant shore 87 years ago.'

(His granddaughter, Jo Hardy) 'I can remember saying to him, "How amazing that you're the last Gallipoli veteran", and he said just like that, "It's not amazing at all, it's entirely logical - I was one of the youngest"'

I don't think it's really mattered to Australia that we had so few (and now, none) direct links to Gallipoli. It's graven onto our collective subconscious.
Some other things, however, are not...

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