Lesson Plan

From Citizens to Outcasts

Watch a video detailing the steps taken to isolate Jews from German life. Open up into a conversation about the precursors the world should be on the lookout for when seeing human rights violations taking place around the globe.

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Domain
Nazi Germany
Subject
Actions
Topic
Segregation

Enduring Understanding

Isolation and dehumanization, when not countered, allows for increasingly harsh treatments and injustices to take place.

Essential Question

  • 1How did Nazi Germany gradually isolate Jews from society?

Readiness

10 Min

Ask students, what is segregation? Have them come up with some examples of ways in which people can be segregated from one another. Open the class into a brief conversation about segregation by asking the questions below.

  1. Can segregation occur naturally? (city lines, areas of ethnic concentration, etc.)
  2. What problems can segregation cause?

Input

15 Min

Pull up the video, From Citizens to Outcasts, by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Introduce the video by reading through the context that can be found directly above the Discussion Question. Provide students with the question below prior to starting the video. While they watch, have students take notes to answer it.

How did Nazi Germany gradually isolate, segregate, impoverish, and incarcerate Jews and persecute other perceived enemies of the state between 1933 and 1939?

Output

30 Min

Reiterate to students that Nazi Germany took great measurers in order to dehumanize the Jews. Propaganda made them out to be enemies of the state. These tactics made many non-Jewish Germans take little notice or regard for the mistreatment and grave injustice that would continue against the Jews.

Divide the class into groups of five. Provide the groups with the instructions below. Give students the opportunity and time to research if necessary.

  1. Answer the question, What lesson does looking back at Nazi Germany’s mistreatment of Jews teach us about present day injustices?
  2. Think of a current or recent example where you can see an injustice being done against a particular group.
    1. Who is this group?
    2. Why are they being persecuted against?
    3. What is being said about them?
    4. What injustices are being taken out against them?
    5. Is there potential that things could escalate?
  3. Prepare a brief presentation on the group you chose to highlight. Presentations can be done verbally, or if desired, with PowerPoint or Prezi.
Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

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

Lesson Plan

Segregation in History and Today

Watch video testimonies from Jewish survivors from USC iWitness. Students will open into a discussion about segregation in history and modern day.

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Domain
Nazi Germany
Subject
Actions
Topic
Segregation

Enduring Understanding

As devastating a reality as we have seen from segregation in history, it still prevails in the world today.

Essential Question

  • 1What did segregation mean for the Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe? What does it mean today?

Readiness

10 Min

Begin by asking the class to write a short response answering the questions below. Assure students they will not be asked to share what they have written.

  1. What is segregation? What does it mean to you?
  2. Is segregation a thing of the past or does it have a place in today’s world?

You may also want to provide students with the official definition. Take this time to mention to students that segregation can be racial and religious.

Segregation: the enforced separation of different racial groups in a country, community, or establishment.

It is equally important to note that segregation can be further identified as being de jure or de facto. De jure segregation is implemented by laws while de facto segregation is based off common understanding and personal choice.

Input

20 Min
Teacher's Note
You may need to make a free account with iWitness from the USC Shoah Foundation before accessing these testimonies. You can make an account and save the videos used prior to beginning this lesson for easy access.

Watch video testimonies on Kurt Baum (clips 19-23; 19:00-23:00 minutes) and Nomick Cyanmon (clip 17; 4:32-6:45) on USC IWitness.

Show testimonies one at a time, stopping to answer the questions for one before moving on to the other.

Questions for Kurt Baum:

  1. What changes did Kurt Baum describe from his social circle?
  2. How did Kurt’s father react to being kicked off the board from his club?
  3. What were some other instances of segregation in the community that he describes?

Questions for Nomick Cynamon:

  1. What did Nomick notice when he returned to the United States?
  2. How did he react to segregation that he saw?
  3. Why do you think he reacted the way he did?

Output

20 Min

In an open forum, ask students for examples of segregation in communities, both in times of the Holocaust and in modern times.

  1. What was the purpose of segregating the Jews?
  2. In what ways can a community reinforce or dismantle segregation?
  3. Did your initial thoughts of segregation change over the course of this lesson?

Give students some time to add to what they wrote down at the beginning of the class.

Teacher Primer

Know Before You Go

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