Pre-War Jewish Life
Examine what Jewish life was like prior to the rise of Nazism. What was culture like and what challenges did they face?
Examine the roles of people during the Holocaust and tease out lessons about life today.
Watch a video where Jewish teens share their experiences with antisemitism. Students will hear real-world examples of antisemitism and discuss ways to combat it.
Antisemitism continues to be a problem today. Individuals today experience harassment both in person, and online.
Share the definition of antisemitism with your students. You may choose to print out this page from Echoes & Reflections for students to have with them during the lesson.
Read through the definition together, breaking it down sentence by sentence if necessary. If you printed out the sheet for students, you could have them write notes or underline as you go through the definition.
Ask students if they have ever heard or seen antisemitism in their lives, whether it be online or in person. Ask if there are any volunteers willing to share their experiences.
Play this video (4-minutes) from CBS Morning News, taken from a lesson from Echoes & Reflections about Jewish teens talking about antisemitism.
Next, open up the class into a discussion with the following questions:
How might you respond if you see antisemitism or someone you know is being harassed? As a group, come up with some ideas of how to respond safely. Some examples could include:
How might you encourage others to stand up to antisemitism? Draft a letter, a poster, or a slogan to encourage people to stand up to antisemitism and hate.
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
This lesson focuses on the Rosenstrasse Protest, a woman-led public demonstration in Berlin in 1943 against the deportation of Jewish men and boys and “mixed-race” men and boys.
The Rosenstrasse Protest was a public demonstration of non-Jewish women in Berlin against the arrest of their male Jewish relatives being detained by the Gestapo to be deported to forced labor camps.
Ask the class to think of different ways someone could resist a dictatorship. Write all of the answers people come up with on the board or a shared work space.
Provide a brief overview of the Rosenstrasse Protest with the students. Use the resource, Rosenstrasse Protest by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum as a resource for this. Please have the students read through it individually and have them take notes. Take time to answer any questions students have as best you can.
Divide the class into groups to discuss the following questions:
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
Students will learn about the Kindertransport, the rescue effort by Great Britain for Jewish refugee children.
During times of strife, people make choices that have strong lasting consequences. The Kindertransport exemplifies people making these lasting choices through responsibility and courage in order to protect vulnerable people.
Explain to students that after Kristallnacht, the violent outbreak against Jews, it was becoming increasingly difficult for Jewish people to leave Germany. Seeing this threat, Great Britain led a series of rescue efforts allowing thousands of refugee Jewish children temporary visas so they could leave Nazi Germany.
Pull up the resource, Kindertransport, by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum and read through it as a class. Watch the videos and look at the historical artifacts included on the website.
Then play this short clip by Gerard Friedenfeld, local Wisconsin Holocaust survivor.
Open up into a class discussion with the questions below.
Share Jack Hellman’s teddy bear from the reading. Explain that many children brought very few personal items from home.
3-2-1 Exit Ticket
On a half sheet of paper, have students respond to the following based on today’s lessons:
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
Students will learn about a Swedish diplomat who helped save upwards of 100,000 Hungarian Jews before disappearing under mysterious circumstances in 1945.
Individuals were able to use their position to rescue Jews from harm.
Explain to students that the War Refugee Board was one of the initiatives that the United States worked on to provide aid during the Holocaust. Explain that they will be learning about one of the individuals that worked through these efforts to save Jews in Hungary.
Talking points provided by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum Holocaust Encyclopedia.
Play the Yad Vashem video (6 minutes) for the class. If necessary, play the video again.
While they watch, ask students to write down answers to the following questions:
As a class, discuss the responses to the video.
Lastly, show students a clip from Holocaust survivor, Tom Lantos through USC Shoah Foundation iWitness. Please note, that this link may take you to a search result. Click on the video for Tom.
After watching the clip, open into a class discussion on the impact that Raoul Wallenberg had on Tom Lantos. Remind them that Tom is just one of tens of thousands of Jews whose rescue is credited to Wallenberg.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
Genocide is a legal term used to describe the intentional destruction of a minorities group. It may look different across different cases, but they share many commonalities.
Begin by asking your students what words come to mind when they think of the word ‘Genocide.’ Write down their responses on the whiteboard. If they are having trouble coming up with words, have them think of the Holocaust and the words they might use to describe that.
Next, provide students with the United Nations definition for genocide:
Genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group as such:
Ask your students if they have any questions after seeing the legal definition. If they do, have them write these down. Explain that the following resources will aim to expand their understanding of genocide. They will have the opportunity to return to these questions if they have not answered through the upcoming resources.
Play the video, What is Genocide? by the USC Shoah Foundation. As they watch, have them take notes about the different experiences mentioned and major themes to explore.
When the video is over, ask students to share that they wrote down.
Next, bring up Ben Ferencz through Dimensions in Testimony. Explain that Ben Ferencz was an American lawyer known for his work as an investigator of Nazi war crimes. You now have the opportunity to ask Ben some questions. Below are examples of questions that you may want to ask as a class, but you can ask other questions as they come up.
Ask students if their questions from the beginning have been answered. If not, have them read their questions to the class and try to answer them as a group. If you need additional resources, try the Holocaust Encyclopedia from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
As a group, go through some of the things they learned. If necessary, return to the list from the beginning and have them add to it with what they know.
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
Students will watch a short film showing a pro-Nazi demonstration from 1939 in New York.
American citizens were aware of Nazi ideology and some supported and embraced these values.
Explain to your students that while the Nazi party only resided in Germany, Nazi ideology and practices sprouted in areas within the United States. The German-American Bund was a pro-Nazi organization for Americans of German descent. The Bund’s leader, Fritz Kuhn, tried to portray himself as the “American fuhrer,” although the organization never received support from the Nazi party.
Explain to your students that the German-American Bund was present in multiple states. The largest Bund rally was held in 1939 at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Play this 7-minute film, A Night at the Garden by filmmaker Marshall Curry. Warn students that the video contains hateful speech and that some of the clip may be difficult to watch.
While they watch, ask students to take notes on what they see. When the film is over, take 5 minutes for students to share what they wrote down.
Use the remaining time to open a discussion with the questions below:
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
Learn the story of Mildred Fish Harnack, a Milwaukee-born woman famous for her role in the underground resistance in Germany. Mildred was the only American civilian killed on the direct order of Hitler.
Some people risked their lives to speak out against Nazi ideology.
Begin by asking your students, how far would you go to stand up for what you believe in?
Read through this resource on Mildred Fish Harnack as a class.
Explain that neither Mildred nor Arvid were Jewish or deemed “undesirable” by Hitler’s standards. To the contrary, Arvid was employed by the government and was considered to fit the mold of the ideal Aryan. Despite not being affected by discriminatory policies imposed by the Third Reich, Mildred and Arvid went to great lengths to oppose Nazi ideology.
In pairs or small groups, have the class answer the following questions:
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
A brief case study highlights how individual decisions strengthen Nazism.
The Holocaust was not inevitable but was the result of the choices made by many individuals.
Ask students what it means to be a perpetrator, to perpetuate a crime. Ask them who the perpetrators of the Holocaust were. Explain that today you are focusing on how seemingly small decisions contributed to the perpetration of the Holocaust, even if that was not the person’s intent.
Listen to the audio file, “Do You Take the Oath?” by Facing History and Ourselves.
Think-Pair-Share.
Think: Have students spend a few minutes writing down their response to this question: Why did the man in the recording sign the oath? (3 minutes)
Pair: Have students talk to the person next to them about their answers. Do they think the man should have made a different choice? Why was it hard to make a different choice?
Share: Use this exercise to engage in a discussion about Holocaust perpetrators. Was the man a perpetrator? How does he seem different from the Nazis seen in the movies? In the final wrap up to the lesson, the teacher should highlight that the Holocaust required the consent and participation of many different people, including business people, doctors, nurses, architects, pastors, teachers, store owners, and laborers. Some of these people participated because they agreed with Nazism but other people acted with self-interest and ended up strengthening Nazism.
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
Read through a testimony provided by one of the people saved by Oskar Schindler. Understand what it was like for a Jewish person to trust a German during this time.
During the Holocaust we can see numerous accounts of non-Jews, or gentiles going out of their way to rescue Jews from being taken, harmed or deported.
Discuss the following quote by Suzy Kassem: “Stand up for what is right against the wrong.”
Ask the students what they think this means. Do they know what it means to be an upstander?
You may want to provide students with the definition of an upstander: a person who speaks or acts in support of an individual or cause, particularly someone who intervenes on behalf of a person being attacked or bullied.
Next, introduce Oskar Schindler. Tell your students that Oskar Schindler was one of the most famous rescuers during the Holocaust. His status as a factory owner allowed him to hire Jews and protect them from deportations. He had been arrested several times for his apparent favoritism towards Jews but this did not deter him. Schindler and his wife are responsible for the rescue of 1,200 persecuted Jews.
Direct students to the Testimony of Yitzhak Stern from Yad Vashem. Explain that they will be reading the testimony of someone saved by Oskar Schindler. Ask students to read the testimony to themselves. Open up a discussion with the class asking the following questions:
Divide the class into groups of three or five. After reviewing the quote and Yitzhak’s testimony, create a brief presentation on what it means to be an upstander. Presentations can be made with Prezi, PowerPoint, or done verbally depending on what time permits. Students may want to use this additional resource by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum to help them with their presentations.
Here are some questions to help focus the presentation:
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.
Explore the stories from women rescuers during the Holocaust. Students will have the opportunity to learn the stories of courageous female upstanders and what they risked in order to save the lives of Jews.
This lesson is generously sponsored by Godfrey & Kahn.
During the Holocaust we can see numerous accounts of people going out of their way to rescue Jews from being harmed or deported.
Start by asking students, “What is an upstander?”
After students have had a chance to answer, you can provide them with the official definition. An Upstander is “a person who speaks or acts in support of an individual or cause, particularly someone who intervenes on behalf of a person being attacked or bullied.”
Next, discuss the following quote by Samantha Power- “If I look at the mass, I will never act. If I look at the one, I will.”
Direct students to the “Women of Valor” section from Yad Vashem. Show them where to find the women’s stories; take some time to click on one or two of the women’s stories to demonstrate how to find the information they will need.
Divide students into groups of three to five. Assign each group one of the heroines’ stories to look into. Ask students to prepare a presentation telling this person’s story. Presentations can be made with Prezi or PowerPoint, if your class does not have access to computers, presentations may be done with poster boards or large pieces of paper.
Once students have been assigned their group and heroine, provide them with the following questions to help structure their presentation.
This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.
Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.