A New Jersey lesson is "overloaded with junk items from popular culture." A New York text presents a distorted view of Hitler's writings in Mein Kampf, "creating the impression that blacks and not Jews were his primary targets." A California effort is full of "errors of basic fact and interpretation." Rarely do texts discuss Christian anti-Semitism, and more often than not they prefer general terms like "prejudice" to "anti- Semitism" when discussing the Nazi policy of genocide. Holocaust curricula usually fail to note that Hitler's ter- ror was state-sponsored, and a number suggest the Nazi persecution of Jews bears great resemblance to the U.S. treatment of American Indians. In her article, the late Ms. Dawidowicz expressed approval for two available Holocaust curricula: New York State's Teaching About the Holocaust and Genocide and Life Unworthy of Life, produced in 1987 in Farmington Hills by the Center for the Study of the Child. Professor Sidney Bolko- sky developed the Life cur- riculum and served as one of three writers on the pro- ject. He says ignorance about the Holocaust is mul- tifaceted. One reason is that world history is no longer a required course at many U.S. high schools. And when it is taught, "it covers every- thing from the Big Bang to what happened yesterday, which means you rarely even get to World War II," he says. Educators themselves may know little about the subject — and teaching the murder of 6 million human beings would be difficult for anyone. Professor Bolkosky also notes teachers' hesitancy to speak about the Holocaust as a singular, unparalleled tragedy in history. If they do make mention of it, the Holocaust is usually clumped together with a whole variety of other hor- rors: Cambodia, Yugoslavia, the Turks' campaign against the Armenians. What results is a kind of blurred vision, with "geno- cide" used with such fre- quency it's impossible for students to separate one tragedy from another, or to see why the Holocaust is unique. A successful course on the Holocaust, Professor Bolkosky says, combines historical facts with person- al recollections: Who sup- plied the Zyklon B gas at death camps and how large was Auschwitz, but also what was it like for Aaron Goldberg growing up in Warsaw before the Nazis, how did he survive on no more than a piece of bread a day in Dachau, and how can he endure knowing that everyone else in his family was gassed? Survivors' testimonies are one of the most effective tools in teaching the Holocaust, Dr. Bolkosky says. This is especially true when speakers offer some- thing students can relate to, telling a group of 10th- graders, for example, "When I was 16 — your age — I was living in Vienna and Hitler had just come to power..." Professor Bolkosky believes Holocaust educa- tion should begin in high school, when students are mature enough to begin con- templating such a complex issue. Otherwise, he says, the Holocaust either is reduced to a crude simplici- ty — "The Nazis hated Jews and they killed 6 million of them" — or "You end up telling just part of the story, in which case you're lying about it." Holocaust classes also should show the roots of the tragedy, the history of anti- Semitism and nations' toler- ance for suffering. The Holocaust, he says, "is not an anomaly. It's an out- growth of Western civiliza- tion." In his own University of Michigan-Dearborn class on the Holocaust, Professor Bolkosky teaches students "of every age and political persuasion, men and women, Arabs, history and humanities majors. The one thing they all have in com- mon is that they don't know the first thing about the Holocaust. "So we start from ground zero. The first question we answer is, 'Why aren't we looking at other mass mur- ders, as well?' because if I don't discuss it, somebody will always ask it. "By the third week, there's nobody who doesn't understand why the Holocaust was different. "It's not that we're com- peting, 'Who had the worst genocide?'" he says. But no other tragedy was quite so methodical, so involving of every aspect of the nation — from the high-ranking Nazi like Eichmann to the com- panies placing bids to sup- ply gas for the death camps, from the man driving the train headed for Auschwitz to the father whose daily work was rounding up Jews for mass shootings. Audio tapes of survivors' testimonies always will be one of the best methods for teaching, Professor Bolkosky says, because stu- dents are rarely left unaf- fected by hearing the inti- mate details of a single soul's agony. And they will last long after the last sur- vivor dies. "The tapes will continue what thesurvivors have begun," he says. "They will be the witnesses." he first widely used Holocaust curricu- lum was Facing History and Our- selves, which Professor Bolkosky says offered "a major turnaround" in Holocaust education. Previously, the teaching of Hitler's murder of 6 mil- lion Jews often was relegat- ed to a paragraph or two in a history textbook. To this day, students who do not benefit from a special pro- gram are unlikely to learn much about the Holocaust T Frank Buford: "My number- one goal is to fight discrimination." Loren Willey and a painting, "Ghosts," by a Clio High student rn rn C/3 CD 53