A forum promoting best practice in Holocaust instruction
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I would shy away from using this in my classes even at the university level. It has nothing to do with combining the Jewish Christian ideas. It is more because like Dana, I don't really understand it, or it doesn't grab me or speak to me. There are other artists whose work I really like and find powerful. Two examples are the work of David Olere & Samual Bak. By the way several members of the Ning were privileged to hear Bak speak at Yad Vashem this summer. As he talked about his experiences as a Holocaust survivor, he did a power point which included several of his paintings, many of "The Little Boy in the Warsaw Ghetto with his Hands up" ( I cannot remember the actual title.) HIs paintings absolutely grab me & force me to confront my feelings.
I agree with Daryll...even at the college level I would not use this. I do use art and other media in my Literature and Multimedia of the Holocaust course at the college. I use the art of David Olere and Samuel Bak as she points out because they are more reflective of the suffering from a Jewish-victim perspective. If we are educating students about the roots of antisemirism and the indirect road to Auschwitz then we are already exposing them to Christianiy's part in the proprgation of antisemitism through the ages and how the Nazi acts often paralleld those actions of the chuch. It is not necessary to impose the image of that in such a forceful and somewhat artificial manner. Take a look at the art lessons I have attached which I find very powerful when students respond to them.
Rich
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