Pledging Allegiance
Students will compare the original German soldiers’ oath to the one created by Hitler.
Current Implications
Explore a summary of contemporary antisemitism, spanning the history between World War II and today.
Antisemitism is an ongoing issue throughout the world.
Ask your students if they have heard the term antisemitism before. If they have, how do they understand it? Guide discussion toward the definition from the Anti-Defamation League to set the stage for the rest of the lesson.
Turn toward the reading about Contemporary Antisemitism from Echoes & Reflections. Begin by reading the first section aloud as a class, answering any questions or defining words about which the students require clarification.
Then, divide the class into two groups.
Have every student read their section individually. Then pair with another member of their group to clarify the main points, questions, and challenges.
Finally, ask group 1 pairs to partner with group 2 pairs.
Have each pair share their summary of the section they read. What were the most important parts, what questions do they have, what is their understanding of the historical era being addressed?
Then, ask the quartet to answer the following set of 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.
Watch a compelling video about antisemitism as it manifests in the world today, with insights from global experts on the subject.
Antisemitism undermines the foundations of democracy.
At the opening of the video, Samatha Power says, “it would be a grave mistake to view antisemitism as something that merely affects the Jewish people.” Provide this short quote to your students before viewing the video and prompt them to pre-write about it. What do they think it means? How can this be so? Give them 5 minutes to compose some thoughts and then ask them to share.
Watch Antisemitism Today by the USHMM. The video is complex and might be broken down for clarity by pausing between the following sections.
At the conclusion of each section, ask students to reflect on what they understood, what confused them, and what questions they have about the subject. Give space to address these insights.
Beginning to 1:35: What is antisemitism and why it is a problem for democracy
1:35 – 3:00: Two non-governmental manifestations, Islamic & Right Wing extremism
3:00 – 4:35: Antisemitism and its relationship to anti-Zionism and Holocaust denial
4:35 – End: The threat to society created by antisemitism
After the discussion of the video is over and students are feeling comfortable with the information, return to the quote highlighted by Samatha Powers:
“It would be a grave mistake to view antisemitism as something that merely affects the Jewish people.”
Ask your students to expand on their initial writing by answering the following questions:
Give students 10 minutes to reflect on these questions.
If time permits, have students share their reflections in small groups or full class discussion.
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.
Examine opinion polls throughout the era of war and investigate key figures in American politics who helped shape the landscape of public opinion and action in this time period.
Public opinion is shaped by multiple factors and does not guarantee that action will be taken on behalf of that opinion.
Ask students to reflect on what they think contributes to their opinion on something? Who are the influencers in their world? Do all influences carry equal weight? How do they balance the difference of opinions that they hear and that they may agree with?
Cycle through the opinion polls that run the length of the Holocaust, presented via the US Holocaust Memorial Museum exhibit on Americans and the Holocaust.
As you cycle through, prompt students to quickly jot down answers to the following questions that pair with each slide:
Students will explore the writings and primary sources about various influential people from the 1930s and 40s. Groups should be created, each assigned to a different person of influence. Begin at the bottom of this page from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum with the public voices and extend into the political voices if need be.
Groups should prepare a brief presentation about the person to which they are assigned. Each group should answer at least 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.
Students will learn about the rise of the Nazi party. The resource will have them read through excerpts from the Nazi Party’s political party platform. Discussion will evolve into the danger nationalism poses in creating an “us versus them” narrative.
Hitler sought to push his political agenda to strengthen Germany as a nation- at the cost of other cultures and races in the state.
Begin by asking students, What is the difference between patriotism and nationalism?
After giving them a few minutes to come up with their definitions, you can share the official definitions provided by Dictionary.com.
Patriotism: Devoted love, support, and defense of one’s country; national loyalty.
Nationalism: The policy of doctrine asserting the interests of one’s own nation viewed as separate from the interests of other nations or the common interests of all nations. In short, nationalism is a kind of excessive, aggressive patriotism.
Explain to students that political parties and candidates create platforms that help translate their ideas and goals into actions. Tell the class that during this lesson they will read through the National Socialist German Workers’ Party Platform to read through provisions that Hitler proposed to the party.
Direct students to the Facing History and Ourselves source titled, National Socialist German Workers’ Party Platform and read through it together as a class. After you go through the platform, ask the class what their initial thoughts are. Does any one provision stick out to them?
Ask students to get together in small groups of two or three. Give 10-15 minutes for groups to go over the following questions:
Read the quote below by a German Nationalist in 1810 to help you answer the remaining questions:
“A state without a Volk (a people who share a language and culture) is nothing, a soulless artifice; a Volk without a state is nothing, a bodiless airy phantom, like the Gypsies* and the Jews. Only state and Volk together could forma Reich (great empire), and such a Reich cannot be preserved without Volkdom.” -Taken from Facing History and Ourselves.
Go over the questions as a class, collect answers to the main themes to use in future discussions about nationalism and propaganda.
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.