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Hunger Camp at Jaslo
by Wislawa Szymborska
Write it. Write. In ordinary ink
on ordinary paper: they were given no food,
they all died of hunger. "All. How many?
It's a big meadow. How much grass
for each one?" Write: I don't know.
History counts its skeletons in round numbers.
A thousand and one remains a thousand,
as though the one had never existed:
an imaginary embryo, an empty cradle,
an ABC never read,
air that laughs, cries, grows,
emptiness running down steps toward the garden,
nobody's place in the line.
We stand in the meadow where it became flesh,
and the meadow is silent as a false witness.
Sunny. Green. Nearby, a forest
with wood for chewing and water under the bark-
every day a full ration of the view
until you go blind. Overhead, a bird-
the shadow of its life-giving wings
brushed their lips. Their jaws opened.
Teeth clacked against teeth.
At night, the sickle moon shone in the sky
and reaped wheat for their bread.
Hands came floating from blackened icons,
empty cups in their fingers.
On a spit of barbed wire,
a man was turning.
They sang with their mouths full of earth.
"A lovely song of how war strikes straight
at the heart." Write: how silent.
"Yes."
Breaking News
Today
"All the people like us are we, and everyone else is they." ~Rudyard Kipling
"When you think of the long and gloomy history of man, you will find more hideous crimes have been committed in the name of obedience than in the name of rebellion." ~C.P. Snow
"The world is too dangerous to live in-- not because of the people who do evil, but because of the people who sit and let it happen." ~Albert Einstein
"Genocide, after all, is an exercise in community building." ~Philip Gourevitch
"I graduated from a special school. Four years I spent there... all my days were nights. Everything that was near and dear to me they took. There is only one thing worse than Auschwitz itself, and that is if the world forgets there was such a place." ~Henry Appel, survivor
"Goodness, like evil, often begins in small steps. Heroes evolve; they aren't born." ~Ervin Staub
Preemptive Love
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Never Again?
Posted by A. Davis at 9:36 AM 0 comments
Friday, December 9, 2016
Week of December 12
We are close to the end now....
Monday, 12/12
Connections
Tuesday, 12/13
NO CLASS
Wednesday, 12/14
Other Genocides
Thursday, 12/15
Now What?
Friday, 12/16
Timeline Activity
Posted by A. Davis at 11:08 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Links to audio/video
Only comment on the Silent Discussion for the ones you watch. You don't have to watch every single link. Totally up to you.
Music
http://www.cpr.org/classical/story/voice-silenced-and-terezin-composers-lost-holocaust
Theater
http://www.pri.org/stories/2014-03-12/seventy-years-later-holocaust-survivor-remembers-performance-her-lifetime
Personal Histories, USHMM
https://www.ushmm.org/exhibition/personal-history/
First Person Testimonies, USHMM
https://www.ushmm.org/information/visit-the-museum/programs-activities/first-person-program/first-person-podcast
Testimonies by topic, Yad Vashem
http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/remembrance/multimedia.asp
Victor Frankl TED Talk
https://www.ted.com/talks/viktor_frankl_youth_in_search_of_meaning
Posted by A. Davis at 9:46 AM 0 comments
Friday, December 2, 2016
Week of December 5
Monday, 12/5
Stuart Visit
Tuesday, 12/6
Long Class:
Stations
Wednesday, 12/7
Personal Responsibility
Notes check for honors
Long class
Thursday, 12/8
Sunflower
America's Response
Nuremberg
Aftermath
Friday, 12/9
Japanese-American Internment Camps
Farewell to Manzanar
Posted by A. Davis at 11:18 AM 0 comments
Holocaust Poetry
"When It Happened"
by Hilda Schiff
I was playing, I suppose,
when it happened.
No sound reached me.
The skies did not darken,
or if they did, one flicked
away the impression:
a cloud no doubt, a shadow perhaps
from those interminable airplanes
crossing and recrossing
our unbleached beaches, Carbis Bay
or the Battery Rocks, where
all summer long we had dived
and cavorted in and out of
the tossing waters, while
the attention of the adults,
perpetually talking,
seemed focused,
unaccountably,
elsewhere.
No sound reached me
when it happened
over there on that
complicated frontier
near Geneva. (Was the sun
shining there too?)
I did not hear you cry out,
nor feel your heart thump wildly
in shock and terror. 'Go back,'
they shouted, those black-clad figures.
'Go back. You are not permitted to cross.'
Did the color drain from your face?
Did your legs weaken?
'You are under arrest,' they barked.
'Go back and wait.' Back to the
crowd waiting for the train, the train... East?
Did you know what it meant?
Did you believe the rumors?
Were you silent? Stunned? Angry?
Did you signal to them then,
When it happened?
To the welcoming committee
one might say, on the other
side of the border.
To your husband and his friends
just a few yards away,
there, beyond the barbed wire,
beyond the notices saying,
'Illegal refugees will be shot.'
They called across, they said,
'Run, jump, take the risk,'
the frontier is such a thin line,
the distances so short between you and us,
between life and death,
(they said afterwards).
How was it you lacked
the courage (they said
afterwards, drinking tea).
No sound whatsoever disturbed me
when it happened.
I slept well. School
was the same as usual.
As usual I went swimming,
or raced down the hill
on my scooter or on foot
laughing with friends.
Often at night
in the dark of my bed,
I would hear the trains being
shunted down at the station,
their anguished whistling
stirring my imagination
drawing me towards oblivion.
At last, no more embarrassing letters
arriving in a foreign language
witnessing my alienation
from the cricketing scene.
Distracted and displaced
when it happened
I did not hear you ask
which cattle truck to mount,
nor, parched in the darkened
wagon, notice you beg for
a sip of water. On the third day,
perceiving the sound of Polish voices,
I did not catch you whisper to your neighbor,
'It is the East. We have arrived.'
Nor, naked and packed tight
with a hundred others
did I hear you choking
on the contents of those well-known
canisters marked 'Zyklon B Gas'
(It took twelve minutes, they say.)
I was not listening
when it happened.
Now I hear nothing else.
"Holocaust 1944"
Anne Ranaisnghe
To my mother
I do not know
In what strange far off earth
They buried you;
Nor what harsh northern winds
Blow through the stubble,
The dry, hard stubble
Above your grave.
And did you think of me
That frost-blue December morning,
Snow-heavy and bitter,
As you walked naked and shivering
Under the leaden sky,
In that last moment
When you knew it was the end,
The end of nothing
And the beginning of nothing,
Did you think of me?
Oh I remember you, my dearest,
Your pale hands spread
In the ancient blessing
Your eyes bright and shining
Above the candles
Intoning the blessing
Blessed be the Lord...
And therein lies the agony,
The agony and the horror
That after all there was no martyrdom
But only futility-
The futility of dying
The end of nothing
And the beginning of nothing.
I weep red tears of blood.
Your blood.
Posted by A. Davis at 10:26 AM 0 comments
Monday, November 28, 2016
Holocaust Literature Final Project Guidelines
Posted by A. Davis at 12:11 PM 0 comments
Friday, November 18, 2016
Week of 11/28
Monday, 11/28
Rescue
Tuesday, 11/29
SUB
Classroom research
Wednesday, 11/30
Long Class
Stations
Thursday, 12/1
BOB
Friday, 12/2
Liberation
Posted by A. Davis at 7:47 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Thursday Plan
My original resistance plan includes excerpts from a documentary called "Partisans of Vilna", a keynote with some of this information and more, and clips from "Defiance". I am still going to do the "Defiance" clips and a few other things on Friday, but we are cutting the "Partisans of Vilna" portions and you all are going to be writing instead of discussing on a lot of this. Sorry, I didn't expect to be out today, and this was the best way I can do in order not to lose any time and still cover what I need to cover. The link is below and my instructions for the link are below that.
http://www.hhrecny.org/clientuploads/curriculum/HHREC_Holocaust_Curriculum_Lesson6.pdf
Don't look at or read anything else. Some of it is going to be covered later...
When you read the documents, I want you to open a word processing document and answer ALL questions on it. Specify them by which document they cover. You are going to email this to me at the end of class today.
Scroll to Document 8 (page 241). Answer the questions on that page.
Read Document 9A and answer the questions at the end of it.
Read Document 9B and answer its question.
Look at Document 10A and 10B.
Read Document 11 and answer its questions.
Read Document 12 and answer its questions.
Skip Document 13 (we already talked about it).
Skip Document 14.
Read Document 15 and answer its questions.
Skip Document 16.
Read Document 17 and answer its questions.
STOP. READING. Don't read anything else.
If there is time left, work on something else or sit quietly. If you don't finish, email me what you have. Email it TODAY.
Posted by A. Davis at 10:50 AM 0 comments
Friday, November 11, 2016
Opinion Piece
Posted by A. Davis at 10:53 AM 0 comments
Monday, October 24, 2016
Week of 10/24
I am really looking forward to the conference this week!
Monday, 10/24
To the Little Polish Boy
Salvaged Pages chapters
Tuesday, 10/25
Evaluation
Wednesday, 10/26
Conference
Thursday, 10/27
Round Table Discussion
Friday, 10/28
Deportations
Posted by A. Davis at 7:17 AM 0 comments
Friday, October 7, 2016
Week of October 17
As I mentioned before fall break, we are getting into the really difficult material. Be prepared for emotional responses.
Monday, 10/17
Poetry
Ghetto notes
Lodz Ghetto
Tuesday, 10/18
Rumkowski
Journal Assignment
Wednesday, 10/19
Ghettoes
"To the Little Polish Boy"
Thursday, 10/20
Evaluation
Friday, 10/21
Wannsee Conference
Posted by A. Davis at 10:54 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
Judaism Seminar Makeup Essay
You have the set of notes I gave you. I also want you to peruse this website. http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaism.html Select two aspects of Judaism that you find most interesting and write a 2-3 page paper explaining those two aspects. Conclude by highlighting the things that surprised you the most, or the things you feel have the most misconceptions in regard to the perception of Judaism by outsiders.
Posted by A. Davis at 10:42 AM 0 comments
Maus Seminar Makeup Essay Questions
Posted by A. Davis at 10:39 AM 0 comments