THE JEWISH NEWS THIS ISSUE 6(:) SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY OCTOBER 16, 1987 / 23 TISHREI 5748 Teachers Reviewing Holocaust Curriculum New materials are ready for Oakland County and high school students throughout the U.S. ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor What factors led to the Holocaust? What is the guilt of the Church? How are we responsible and what can we do to prevent future genocides? High school students in Oakland County and throughout the United States will begin debating these 40-year-old questions in a more- informed way within the next few months because of a locally-produced Holocaust curriculum. More than 60 Oakland County teachers will get their first look at the new curriculum on Tuesday at a day- long training session at the Jewish Community Center. Their day will in- clude a tour of the adjacent Holocaust Memorial Center. The 18-lesson curriculum was developed by Dr. Sidney M. Bolkosky of University of Michigan-Dearborn, Southfield-Lathrup High School teacher Betty Rotberg Ellias, and Dr. David Harris of the Oakland County Intermediate School District. It is sponsored by the Center for the Study of the Child, a pseudonym for Sidney Lutz of Lutz Associates in Farm- ington Hills, which has provided sup- port and staff time. Detroit-area Holocaust survivors play a prominent role in the lessons, appearing in a 50-minute videotape with eyewitness accounts and in some cases supplying original film footage of their families before the Holocaust. "This curriculum talks about perpetrators and bystanders," said Peter Nagourney, project coordinator at Lutz for the Center for the Study of the Child. "We would rather do that than assault students, parents and teachers with pictures of piles of bodies:' To drive home the lessons of the Holocaust, the new curriculum — Life Unworthy of Life — uses the latest teaching techniques. Teachers can have the students participate in a Nuremberg trial or in a Nazi rally, keep track of their calorie consump- tion for a day and compare it to the amount of food people in the concen- A page from "Life Unworthy of Life." tration camps were given, and utilize the survivor tapes and war correspon- dent descriptions. Although the curriculum has eighteen 45-minute lessons, not every teacher or school district will have the time to use all 18. But Nagourney and Bolkosky expect teachers minimally to cover the five lessons that use por- tions of the videotape. Those lessons cover destruction of families and per- sonal responsibility; "Toward the Final Solution," Kristallnacht and the ghettos as seen through the eyes of specific victims; the Final Solution and its perpetrators; "Planet Auschwitz," which will enable the students to understand the victims' experiences in the camps and how the camps operated. The entire curriculum includes the videotape, a 318-page teacher manual, a 214-page student textbook, unit exam, archival photographs, maps, chronological tables, and sug- gestions for discussions and addi- tional activities. "What comes out of it," says Nagourney, "are the ethical and Continued on Page 26 REACHING OUT Personal rewards and understanding are the outgrowth of a communal anniversary