Holocaust Remembrance Day - How to Engage in Difficult Conversations with Children and Teens

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Holocaust Remembrance Day - How to Engage in Difficult Conversations with Children and Teens

Special podcast episode of 'Raising Good Humans' from April 2021 about talking to kids and teens about atrocities.  

 https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/how-to-talk-with-children-about-the-holocaust/id1473072044?i=1000516256682 

In the episode, Jennifer Garner and Dr. Aliza W. Pressman discuss developmentally appropriate ways to engage in difficult conversations about the Holocaust. If this seems like an odd conversation to be having with Jennifer (who is not Jewish and has no direct connection to the Holocaust), she stood in such allyship as a representative of many people out there who, despite no connection to the event themselves, want to open discussions around these historical atrocities with their children in the hopes that they never happen again.

Today, more than ever, we have to discuss these hard topics with our children. This is not just about having conversations about the Holocaust, it is about starting to engage our children early on about the risks of dehumanizing anyone. This is something we do casually in society today - whether it's a sibling with whom you don't get along or someone with a different political view.

We tend to turn people into villains when we have no other way to understand our differences. And it's dangerous.

Dr. Pressman says "I have personal connection to this, as the grandchild of Holocaust survivors, and every year, there are fewer survivors left in the world to tell their stories so I will continue to tell their stories. Only through telling their stories can we honor those who lived, those who died, and learn from the mistakes of the past to avoid more harm in the future.
The photo attached to this article is of my paternal grandparents, Sabina and Jack."
"I remember growing up hearing the phrase #neverforget and saying, “Who would ever forget this, why are we always talking about this?”
My grandmother would answer that we can never stop talking about this - that when you begin to forget one human, that is how a holocaust happens. In an interview, Mama Bina (as we call her) was once asked if she hated Nazis. She said, “If I hated the Nazis, then Hitler would have won...you don’t answer with hate, you answer by remembering and using your voice for good.” Silence is the enemy of good.


So, when someone wonders why it is important to express resistance to acts of oppression and dehumanization, it is because we have learned from history how dangerous it is to remain silent.

"Today, I want to honor my grandmother, Sabina (Mama Bina) and my grandfather, Papa Jack, by reminding myself and my children to use our voices so we can say #neveragain to oppression and hate. We are all charged with the privilege of raising good humans."


Please bear witness to someone's story today, because as Eli Wiesel said in 2002, “Whoever listens to a witness, becomes a witness.”

 

Educational Resources

 

https://www.yadvashem.org 

I  Never Saw Another Butterfly
https://www.amazon.com/Never-Saw-Another-Butterfly-Concentration/dp/0805210156

 

Number The Stars
https://www.amazon.com/Number-Stars-Lois-Lowry/dp/0547577095/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=number+the+stars&qid=1617770580&s=books&sr=1-1 

 

Diary of Anne Frank
https://www.amazon.com/Anne-Frank-Diary-Young-Girl/dp/0553296981/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=diary+of+Anne+frank&qid=1617770675&s=books&sr=1-1

 

*** from Raising Good Humans: A judgment-free, science-backed, empowering community with Dr. Aliza Pressman, creator of the Raising Good Humans Podcast. 
See list of episodes here


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