Dr. Sidney Lutz, Dr. Sidney Bolkosky and Betty Ellias: extra curricular. High School Outreach Non-HMC volunteers are preparing a curriculum for Oakland County SUSAN WELCH Special to The Jewish News very single stu- dent ought to study the Holo- caust — in depth," asserts Rev. Jim Lyons, one of the many commu- nity leaders who have taken their hats off to Oakland County In- termediate Schools for their deci- sion to make a ten-lesson unit on the Holocaust an integral part of the world history course in the county's 43 public high schools in 1987. The Holocaust curriculum is new in more ways than one. Its unique format and untraditional approach have already won an enthusiastic response from several leading Holocaust scholars, and may well make be, says Dr. De- nnis Klein, of the Anti- Defamation League in New York, a prototype for future curricula. Klein calls it "a step in precisely thp right direction" — away from the "inadequate and wrongly fo- cused" education which has pre- dominated the past. "There has been virtually no effective teaching of the Holocaust in American secondary schools," agrees Dr. Sidney Bolkosky, pro- fessor of history at University of Michigan-Dearborn, who is co- author with Southfield teacher Betty Ellias of the new cur- riculum. Often schools and teachers have shied away from teaching the Holocaust at all, be- yond a passing reference to it as part of World War II. They have been reluctant to tackle such a sensitive and difficult subject and afraid of giving offense, Bolkosky explains. When the Holocaust has been taught, it has usually been presented, he says, in a way "which tends to shock and numb, not cause students to approach the subject critically and self- reflectively." Lists of atrocities, films of mass graves and naked bodies shown without sensitive discus- sion or the necessary, comprehen- sive historical background, and concentration only on the victims and chief perpetrators have often left students feeling assaulted, confused and even bored, he as- serts, expressing a view shared by many educators. Teachers and survivors visit- ing schools, have noted that even Jewish children don't want to hear about it any more. "They don't want to hear that to be a Jew is to be a victim," says Bol- kosky. And the frequently heard responses — "It's terrible but it could never happen again" and "I would never have behaved like that" — show that the crucial les- sons of the Holocaust have not gone home. Over-simplification has led to some basic misconceptions, says Bolkosky, leaving students with the impression that the Holocaust was the work of a comparitively few insane racists, monsters de- voted to Hitlerism, and with "no real understanding that 12 mil- lion people, ordinary people — builders, engineers, architects, lawyers, doctors, teachers, rail- road workers — were actively in- volved." Many subtleties and com- plexities have barely been touched on, he adds. People did not behave in the stereotypical way which has been presented. There were "anti-Semites who hid Jews be- cause they hated the Germans (one poster in Holland said, 'Stay away from our damn Jews'); Nazis who hid Jews because they could not accept the extent of the brut- ality; and millions, who in apathy and indifference, perpetrated per- secution because it was 'just a job.'" "When you see the bodies, the horror, you think 'Monsters did this!' And there were monsters," says Bolkosky. "But there were also normal, everyday people. One survivor described Auschwitz guards as 90 percent normal and 10 percent monsters. We have to look at the 90 percent." Accordingly, the curriculum focusses equally on victims and perpetrators. It is also unusual in that it draws some conclusions, "not usually an educationally sound procedure," says Bolkosky, "but in this case it seemed the best instrument to prevent it hap- pening again." "We progressed to Au- schwitz," he declares. Examining how "objectifying, neutral lan- guage" on the one hand and "glib, emotive propaganda" on the other obscured the real purpose and virulent progress of prejudice, will make students aware that "the real threat is not the overt acts of terrorism and violence, but the insidious, bureaucratic, euphemis- tic • legislation," which conceals as it achieves "the erosion of lib- erty." Bolkosky's own scholarship and his "wonderful ability to make the subject vital and alive" is remembered vividly by those HMC docents whom he trained. He is seen by fellow scholars and associates as one guarantee of the curriculum's effectiveness. Another guarantee, col- leagues say, is Betty Ellias' sense of what will work in the classroom, derived from many years of interest in Holocaust education and of practical experi- ence as an English teacher at Southfield-Lathrup High School. "One major concern has been to keep it as simple and as clear as possible, to build step by step in a definite sequential order which will make it easier to teach." The language has been Continued on next page 17