Lesson Plan

Auschwitz Through Art

Explore art created by victims of Auschwitz and the reasons and risks people took in order to create them.

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Enduring Understanding

Art created by survivors from Auschwitz paint a picture of what life was like in the notorious death camp.

Essential Question

  • 1What makes art a significant resource for telling history?

Readiness

10 Min

To begin this lesson, pull up the first image from the Yad Vashem resource you will use below. This would be the piece by Yehuda Bacon. Be sure to expand the image before sharing with your students so they don’t see the context.

Ask students to take a few minutes to write down:

  1. What do you see?
  2. What questions do you have?
  3. What do you think the artist might be feeling?

Discuss the responses as a class. Explain to your students that art can be a powerful way to learn about people and places.

 

Input

25 Min

Explain to your students the Auschwitz is known as the most notorious death camp that the Nazis created. Over one million Jewish individuals were killed there.

Pull up the resource, Teaching about Auschwitz through Art, by Yad Vashem. As a class or in small groups, read through the sections: Art as Evidence (1), Portraits (2) and Art as a Means of Conveying (4). While you go through each section, expand the accompanying art and ask students to share what they see and how it makes them feel.

Output

15 Min

In partners, ask students to discuss their answers to the questions below. Provide 10 minutes for this discussion and then ask for people to share.

  1. What are the different reasons why people created art about their experiences?
  2. How do these pieces help tell the story of the Holocaust?
  3. What does it say about the importance of art that people risked their lives to create it in the camp?

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

Shanghai Ghetto

Walk students through the challenges of obtaining U.S. visas and the horrible conditions many faced in seeking refuge in Shanghai.

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Domain
The Holocaust
Subject
Oppression
Topic
Expulsion

Enduring Understanding

Jews fleeing Nazi persecution created a large refugee problem. Challenges in getting visas to the U.S. and other countries left people with very few options.

Essential Questions

  • 1What challenges did Jews face when trying to flee persecution?
  • 2Were other countries welcoming to the influx of refugees?

Readiness

10 Min

Explain to students that as persecution for Jewish people in Nazi occupied territories worsened, more and more people were seeking refuge in other countries. Many countries, including the United States, had a long waiting list to obtain visas.

Pull up this checklist from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Americans and the Holocaust virtual exhibition. Examine one or two of the steps in greater detail.
Up until August 1939, no visas were required to enter Shanghai.

Input

10 Min

Read the following excerpt from a diary entry about entrance to Shanghai:

“We have to go to Shanghai. Terrible letters come from there. One runs again to see if our names are on the list to leave. Before, when one saw his name on the list, one was happy. Today…one cries.”
-Rose Shoshana Kahan diary entry, 1941

Ask students why they think people continued to seek refuge in Shanghai despite hearing such terrible things from there? What does that say about the desperation people had to leave Europe?

Output

30 Min
Teacher's Note
If students do not know about Pearl Harbor, they can click on it within the article and it will take them to a page telling them more about it.

In partners or individually, have students read through this article by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum about Polish Jewish Refugees in the Shanghai Ghetto and answers the questions below.

  1. What were conditions like for the refugees that ended up in Shanghai?
  2. How did things change after the attack on Pearl Harbor?
  3. How did the Jewish refugees maintain a sense or ordinary life?

Come together as a class to go over their answers.

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

The Protocols of the Elders of Zion

Students will learn about a piece of antisemitic literature that was spread in the early 20th century. Open into a conversation about how false information spreads and how difficult it is to be taken back once shared.

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Domain
Intolerance
Subject
Antisemitism
Topic
Racism

Enduring Understanding

Antisemitism and conspiracy theories against Jewish people did not begin, nor did it end, with Nazi Germany.

Essential Question

  • 1Why is it easier to continue believing a lie than it is to admit wrongdoing?

Readiness

10 Min

Begin by asking your students, how does false information spread? Prompt students by asking them to think of social media. How credible are the posts they see? How easily are they shared? What is the danger in being able to easily and quickly post and share information?

Input

10 Min

Pull up the resource, A Hoax of Hate: The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion by the Anti-Defamation League. Start by reading the introduction and stop after the section titled, “The Protocols and Nazi Germany.”

Output

25 Min

Divide your class into small groups of 3-5 and provide them with the instructions below. Provide 10-15 minutes for the group activity before coming back together as a class to go over their answers.

  1. Read through the document at the designated sections. (Introduction through The Protocols in Nazi Germany)
  2. As a group, write out your answers to the following questions:
    1. What are the Protocols? What were they used for?
    2. How did they spread? How many countries did they reach?
    3. The Protocols were widely proven to be false, yet the conspiracy theory continued to spread. How difficult is it to retract or “undo” a lie?
Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

A Priest in Dachau

Analyze primary source documents for Rev. Stanley Dabrowski. Use secondary sources to contextualize the history in the larger picture of the Holocatust.

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Enduring Understanding

German forced wanted to eliminate any opposition to the Third Reich, often imprisoning political and religious leaders they feared would speak out against them.

Essential Question

  • 1How did religious opposition threaten the Third Reich?

Readiness

5 Min

Begin by providing your students with background information on concentration camps. Concentration camps were created for a variety of reasons, including forced labor, detention of individuals viewed as enemies of the state, and eventually, mass murder.

Input

15 Min

Pull up the resource, Polish Victims, by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. As a class, read the first two paragraphs of this article, ending where it begins to talk about “Germanizing Poland.”

Open into a brief class discussion with the following critical thinking question:

Why did German forces eliminate or arrest not just leaders of political groups, but of religious organizations as well?

Output

30 Min

Explain to your students that they will be examining documents from a Polish victim of Nazi persecution, Rev. Stanley Dabrowski.

In groups of 2-3, have students look through and analyze the primary documents from series 1 and 2 of the Rev. Stanley Dabrowski papers from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.

In groups, provide students with the following instructions below. Provide 10-15 minutes for this activity.

  1. Look through the documents from series 1 and series 2.
  2. What can you gather from these documents about Rev. Stanley Dabrowski’s life?
  3. What was happening around this time in the greater context of the Holocaust leading up to Stanley’s arrest?

Once students have had an opportunity to research for themselves, provide this overview of Rev. Stanley Dabrowski’s life, compiled from research by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.

How does Rev. Dabrowski’s story contribute to your overall understanding of the Holocaust?

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

The Circle

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.

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Enduring Understanding

Some people risked their lives to speak out against Nazi ideology.

Essential Questions

  • 1How does one combat harmful ideology?
  • 2In what way can education encourage people to become free thinkers?

Readiness

10 Min

Begin by asking your students, how far would you go to stand up for what you believe in?

Input

20 Min
Teacher's Note
Mildred Harnack was executed for her role in the resistance as well as for her political views. Mildred and her husband were both communists. You may want to take time in this lesson to discuss the reasons why other groups were targeted by the Nazis.

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.

Output

15 Min

In pairs or small groups, have the class answer the following questions:

  1. Why do you think Mildred wasn’t swayed by Nazi propaganda
  2. Why do you think Mildred risked her life to denounce Hitler and Nazi ideology?
  3. How can education help combat hateful propaganda?
  4. What is your biggest takeaway from learning about Mildred Harnack?

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

Black Germans Under Nazism

Students will learn about the descrimination against Black Germans from 1933 to the end of the war under Nazi rule.

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Domain
Nazi Germany
Subject
Actions

Enduring Understanding

All groups that did not meet Nazi criteria, Aryan race were subject to violence and discrimination.

Essential Questions

  • 1How were African Germans discriminated against in Nazi Germany?
  • 2How does the discrimination against Black Germans expand your understanding of Nazism?

Readiness

5 Min

Ask students what they know about the other groups persecuted by Nazi Germany during the Holocaust. Can they come up with other examples of groups that were the targets of Nazi violence?

Explain to students that the Nazis’ idea of creating a superior Aryan (white, European descent) race meant that anyone who did not meet these criteria was endangered . Although there was not a specific organized pogrom to eliminate the African Germans, an unknown number were sterilized, incarcerated, or murdered.

Input

20 Min

Direct students to the resource by The Holocaust Explained from the Wiener Holocaust Library. Scroll down to the section titled, ‘Black People’ or choose it from the list on the left side of the page.

Have students read through this section, taking notes on each of the topics: Employment, Education, Sterilization and Imprisonment, and End of War. When taking notes, students should build a list of acts of social and legal discrimination as well as physical actions and violence against Black people in Germany.

Output

15 Min

Come together as a class. Ask students to look down at the notes they have written down. Ask students if they are surprised by their list. Did they expect there to be so many actions taken against Black people? What actions stood out the most?

At the end of this resource it implies that Black people could have been targeted for mass murder if Germany had not been defeated. What can you deduce from the parallels between the mistreatment of Jews and Blacks that supports this statement?

If necessary, review the Nuremberg Race Laws or the Law Against Overcrowding in Schools.

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

The Evian Conference

Students will learn about the international community’s failed attempt to find suitable options to the refugee crisis following Germany’s annexation of Austria.

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Domain
The Holocaust
Subject
Oppression
Topic
Expulsion

Enduring Understanding

Thirty-two countries came together on July 6-16, 1938 to discuss the refugee crisis in what was known as the Evian Conference.

Essential Question

  • 1Does the international community have a moral obligation to help people who have been forced to leave their home countries?

Readiness

10 Min

Bring up the painting The Refugee by Felix Nussbaum from the Echoes & Reflections website. Ask your students the following questions: Who is the man? What does the globe represent?

Explain that the painting was created by an artist who was killed at Auschwitz. How does the artist express the plight of the refugee in this painting?

Input

10 Min

Direct students to the resource, Evian Conference by Echoes & Reflections. Read it through as a class or have students read it to themselves.
· What were some reasons countries gave for not wanting to take in refugees?

Output

15 Min

Break students out into groups of 3-5 to discuss the questions below.

1. Why do you think Franklin D. Roosevelt made it clear that no country would be forced to change its immigration quotas?
2. What do you think could have happened if at least one of the bigger powers (such as the United States or France) were to volunteer to help in a greater capacity?
3. The Evian Conference is seen as an utter failure by the international community to address the refugee problem in Europe. Considering what happened to the Jews, do you think the international community has a moral obligation to help refugees?
4. Should there be an international agency that requires countries to assist refugees?

If time permits, reconvene as a class and go over what the groups discussed.

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

The Beginning of the End

Watch a video on World War II and the Holocaust by the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. Students will gain an understanding over how World War II started and how the Holocaust evolved from it.

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Domain
Nazi Germany
Subject
Actions
Topic
World War II

Enduring Understanding

World War II was complicated, countries were constantly being occupied, counter-attacking, or joining forces with Nazi Germany. Despite this, the organization of the ‘Final Solution’ still took priority.  

Essential Question

  • 1How did World War II provide a cover for the persecution and murder of Jews? Have we seen this before?

Readiness

5 Min

Explain to students that World War II involved two opposing military alliances: the Allies and the Axis. The main countries making up the Allies were France, Poland, and the United Kingdom. The Axis powers consisted of Germany, Italy, and Japan. Tell students that the video they will watch will help to explain the actions taken by these countries during the war.

Input

25 Min

Give out the questions below prior to starting the video (6.5 min) by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Answers to the questions can be found in the intervals shown above.

Beginning – 1:30
What groups of people were targeted by Nazis and their allies and collaborators? What was their reasoning?

1:30 – 4:40
Which country did Germany invade first? What did they do there?

End of video
How did the war end?

Output

15 Min

In small groups, or as a class, ask students if they are able to list the roles in which major countries played in the war? Write a header for ‘Allies’ (those that fought Germany), ‘Occupied Territories’, ‘Allied with Germany’, and ‘Neutral’. You may want to provide the list of the countries. You can tell them to focus on German aggression, not the attacks done by the Soviet Union. Give students 10 minutes for this activity. If you would like, you can return to the video and have students try to correct their answers.

The answer guide can be found here.

It is okay if students can’t remember all of them from the video (most will not be able to), the exercise is meant to show how much was going on at that time. It is important to remind students that the murders of 6 million Jews and 5 million non-Jews were taking place under the cover of war.

When you explain how the Holocaust was perpetrated under the cover of World War II, you should also mention that this is not the first instance of this happening. The genocide against the Armenians took place under the cover of World War I.

Ask students, why do they think atrocities, such as genocide, take place in conjunciton with war?

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

Schindler’s Heroism

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.

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Enduring Understanding

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.

Essential Question

  • 1What are the characteristics of upstanders?

Readiness

10 Min

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.

Input

10 Min

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:

  1. Why do you think Yitzhak’s colleagues were hesitant about trusting Schindler?
  2. What made Yitzhak trust him anyway?

Output

25 Min

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:

    1. What is an upstander? What motivates a person to be an upstander?
    2. What did it mean during the Holocaust and what does it mean today?
    3. Come up with examples of upstanders from the Holocaust and from your life today.
    4. How can societies, communities, and individuals reinforce and strengthen the willingness to stand up for others?

Wisconsin Academic Standards

This lesson meets the following Academic Standards required by the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.

Lesson Plan

The Heroines

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.

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Enduring Understanding

During the Holocaust we can see numerous accounts of people going out of their way to rescue Jews from being harmed or deported.

Essential Question

  • 1What role do upstanders play in standing up to injustice?

Readiness

10 Min

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.”

  • Ask your students what this quote means to them. How does it help to explain the actions of upstanders and bystanders?

Input

5 Min

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.

Output

35 Min

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.

  1. Who was this person? Briefly describe her role as an upstander.
  2. What made this person risk her life to save the Jewish people?
  3. Did these women face any consequences for their brave actions?
  4. Do you think their role as women made them more or less likely to act as upstanders?
Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

Before you teach, use our teacher primer to freshen up on your content knowledge.