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IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education - Shonaleigh Storyteller FREE EVENT
The IOE's Centre for Holocaust Education is delighted to invite you to a special event on Thursday 24th October 5.30-8.00pm, to be held here at the IOE, 20 Bedford Way, London.
We are privileged to be joined by Shonaleigh a professional storyteller, known in the Jewish tradition as drut’syla, who will be weaving a tale for us during the evening. In the tradition of Yiddish story telling Shonaleigh learnt the skill from her grandmother, a Holocaust survivor, and through her stories creates connections with people, culture and history. As well as being entertaining Shonaleigh demonstrates the art of storytelling and the importance of oral tradition passed through the female line.
We are sure that Shonaleigh’s performance will appeal to a diverse audience, whether you are a teacher of English, History or Religious Studies, or coming from another walk of life we are sure that you will find Shonaleigh’s storytelling both entertaining and enlightening.
This free event will begin at 5.30pm with a wine and nibbles reception followed by the performance at 6pm, the event will end by 8pm. Places are limited so if you wish to attend, email our administrator Shazia Syed with your name and place of work: [email protected] We look forward to seeing you on 24th October.
Register now! IOE's Centre for Holocaust Education - new CPD Dates for 2013/2014
We are now accepting registrations for our CPD dates for 2013/2014, The team here at the IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education will be travelling to venues across England to deliver our programme and next term will see us in London, Nottingham and Portsmouth.
If you are a teacher and would like to register please visit: http://www.hedp.org.uk/secure/user_create.asp
Just a reminder that:
· the programme is totally free for teachers in England (and open to more than one teacher from each school)
· we provide lunch and refreshments throughout the day
· from our CPD you can progress to an IOE MA module in Holocaust education – for free
· we are the only research informed Holocaust education teacher CPD programme in the world
Remembering without knowing? The challenge of Holocaust Memorial Day for schools
In a media-driven world where hardly a day goes by without some reference to Hitler, Auschwitz or the Nazis it may seem perverse to worry about how secure is the memory of the Holocaust. But as schools across the country mark Holocaust Memorial Day (officially January 27) what is at stake is not whether we choose to remember but what form that memory takes and how far we are prepared to confront this traumatic past and seek to understand it.
The very fact of a national Holocaust Memorial Day is itself remarkable: mass murder has been present throughout the long history of humanity but rarely has such atrocity become part of the stories we tell about ourselves. Rather, the story of genocide has been a history of forgetting. For centuries communities have written out of the record their acts of mass murder. And today, even as we commemorate the Holocaust, it may be that we avoid its most difficult and challenging questions.
The Holocaust is in danger of being distilled into a moral fable for our times: a story of evil, racist killers, a few heroic rescuers, and a mass of apathetic, morally weak bystanders. It is a very serviceable past with a simple lesson – “the only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing”. But the past is only so serviceable when it is simplified to the point of distortion, and we do young people a disservice to present it as such.
The IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education supports teachers across the country, through professional development programmes and practical classroom materials, as they move beyond easy moral lessons and help their pupils to explore the Holocaust in far more depth. Closer examination of the historical record allows more nuanced understandings of people’s behaviour, motivation and intent; the picture of the past then revealed is far more complex, far more unsettling and far more meaningful than anticipated.
Pupils discover there is no record of anyone being killed or sent to a concentration camp for refusing to murder Jews, while there are records of people refusing the order to murder who were simply given other duties. So how do we explain the thousands of so-called “ordinary people” who murdered? While extreme antisemitic ideology can explain some of the killers, others participated in mass shootings because of peer pressure, ambition, or a warped sense of ‘duty’.
And the killers were not limited to fanatical young men in SS uniforms. In a picturesque Austrian town, local women, elderly men and teenage boys joined in the hunt for escaped Soviet prisoners of war and murdered them. In a village in Burgenland, local people deported the family of their Roma (Gypsy) blacksmith but kept the blacksmith himself rather than losing his skills. What can we say about whole communities becoming part of persecution and mass murder?
When pupils do research into those who saved Jews, they find no template for the type of person who became a rescuer – no common denominator of age, gender, religious belief, nationality, social class, or political outlook. Indeed, there were even antisemites who risked their lives to save Jews, while others with more enlightened, liberal and tolerant views did nothing to help. The only thing many rescuers tend to share appears to be a certain unorthodoxy and non-conformity. So what model do the rescuers give us, exactly, and what are the implications for our education system, presently so focused on examinations and in socialising young people to take their place in the corporate world?
And who can truly said to be a “bystander” when everywhere ordinary people enriched themselves at public auctions, buying the possessions of their deported neighbours? Where then is the line between collaborator and bystander? Greed and self-interest are also a part of this story, and when examined the past reveals a shocking truth: you do not need to hate anyone to become complicit in genocide.
Essentially the moral lessons that the Holocaust is so often used to teach reflect much the same values taught in schools before the Second World War. And yet – in themselves – these values were evidently insufficient to prevent the genocide. Notions of tolerance and of human rights have been advocated since the Enlightenment; belief in the intrinsic value of human life; the “golden rule” of treating others as you would have them treat you; ideas of kindness, courage, charity and goodwill to those in need are all part of the ethical and moral teaching that have underpinned the values of Western society for centuries. And yet it was from that same society that the Holocaust sprang. What are the deeper flaws in our so-called ‘civilisation’ that allowed Europe to descend so completely into genocide, and what are we doing today to examine them?
The IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education supports teachers across the country in trying to meet this challenge, in helping young people to reflect on why and how – not long ago and not far from where they live – everywhere across Europe people became complicit in the murder of their Jewish neighbours. The questions are challenging, unsettling and disorienting, but they are also vital. Because the danger is that unless commemoration is accompanied by detailed study and depth of understanding then the old myths and misconceptions will continue, and the memory of the Holocaust will remain shallow and insecure.
A version of this article originally appeared in the Huffington Post
To watch a UNESCO film interview with Paul Salmons visit http://www.unesco.org/new/en/education/
Centre Status for the IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education
The Institute of Education (IOE) is pleased to announce the awarding of centre status to the newly renamed Centre for Holocaust Education (formerly known as the Holocaust Education Development Programme). Centre status is conferred by the University of London Senate and in doing so recognises the distinctive contribution of the work undertaken by the IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education (CfHE) as it enters a new three year phase of development. This has also been marked by renewed and extended funding from Pears Foundation and the Department for Education.
In conferring the title of Centre for Holocaust Education the senate has recognised the distinctive nature of the IOE’s Holocaust education programmes and research as well as the activity that has been undertaken in its first three years of existence. During its first phase large scale national research into approaches to teaching and learning about the Holocaust across England was undertaken. As a result of the research findings a range of teacher development programmes have been created with more than 2,500 teachers having benefitted from the IOE’s groundbreaking Holocaust education programmes.
An official launch of the Centre will follow in the coming months.
Director of the Institute of Education, Professor Chris Husbands said: “The IOE is committed to excellence in teaching and learning about the Holocaust and I am very proud that we provide a national programme that is at the leading edge of its field, and has been recognised as worthy of centre status.”
Director of the IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education, Professor Stuart Foster said: “The conferring of centre status recognises the vital importance of our work, the only programme globally that brings together research, scholarship and classroom practice in the field of Holocaust education. We are delighted to be entering a new phase of our work as the IOE’s Centre for Holocaust Education.”
Symposium Keynote Address by Prof. Yehuda Bauer
Making Connections in Holocaust Education: Scholarship, Research and Educational Practice.
A Symposium - 20 January 2010.
This event was organised by the Institute of Education’s Centre for Holocaust Education (formerly the Holocaust Education Development Programme - HEDP) and sponsored by Pears Foundation.
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