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Lawmaker Wants Holocaust Discussion in Schools

Penshaw Monument near Sunderland, in England, is bathed in purple light to commemorate Holocaust Memorial Day (Ian Forsyth / Getty Images)

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Eleanor Dunning said she was shocked when she saw a fellow college student throw up a Nazi signal, and doubly so when the student escaped repercussion from school officials.

State Sen. Jen Day of the Gretna area said she was stunned to learn via recent email that an Omaha area school had tried to teach lessons of the Holocaust but stopped after receiving pushback.

Such incidents underscore the necessity, they and others testified Tuesday, of Legislative Bill 888 鈥 which would add the Holocaust and other acts of genocide to existing Nebraska statutes that already call for multicultural education to K-12 students in public schools.

Currently, the law requires that multicultural education focus on the culture, history and contributions of African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Native Americans and Asian Americans.

鈥凄别蝉辫颈肠补产濒别鈥

Introduced by Day, the broader language had been pushed previously by a former lawmaker but stalled.

Ten people testified Tuesday in support of the resurrected measure presented to the Education Committee. No one spoke in opposition.

The committee took no action, though Lincoln Sen. Patty Pansing Brooks said she found it 鈥渄espicable鈥 鈥 and a reflection of 鈥渢he state of politics today鈥 鈥 that the school Day referred to (but did not identify by name) would receive such pushback about Holocaust education.聽

Day cited a recent survey indicating that 66% of millennials were unable to identify Auschwitz (the Nazi concentration and death camp).

That the Holocaust鈥檚 systematic murder of six million European Jews occurred relatively recently, during World War II, is further reason to be alarmed, Day said.

鈥淣ever Again鈥

She said she was further concerned that only nine Holocaust survivors remain in Nebraska as a 鈥渓iving, breathing鈥 tool that can equip students with the knowledge to identify and reject discrimination and hate.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really missing those human to human stories,鈥 said Day. 鈥淚gnorance will only increase as (the Holocaust) falls further into history.鈥

Gary Javitch of B鈥檔ai B鈥檙ith Omaha said a spike in anti-Semitism is 鈥渞eason enough鈥 to increase Holocaust education. He said Nebraska should become the 24th state to adopt the legal language.

Said Javitch: 鈥淭he phrase 鈥榥ever again鈥 needs to be more than just a slogan.鈥

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