Two-thirds of American Millennials and Gen Z don't know that six million Jews were killed in the Holocaust, according to survey from group pressuring Facebook to ban content denying the atrocity
By Keith Griffith
Daily Mail
September 16, 2020
A new survey has found that two-thirds of
American Millennials and members of Gen Z do not know that six million
Jews were killed during the Holocaust.
The survey of adults ages 18 to 39 was commissioned by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, examining knowledge about the Holocaust among young Americans.
The
survey included 1,000 interviews nationwide and 200 in each state, and
the Claims Conference says the findings bolster the urgency of the
group's campaign to get Facebook to ban holocaust denial from the
platform.
'The survey findings underscore the importance [and] the urgent need to
understand the Holocaust denial is hate speech and to remove denial of
this critical historic event,' the group said in a statement.
Nationally, the survey found that 63
percent of all respondents did not know that six million Jews were
killed in the Holocaust, and 36 percent thought that 'two million or
fewer Jews' died.
The states where the
highest share of young people did not know that six million Jews were
killed were Arkansas with 69 percent, followed by Delaware with 68
percent, Arizona with 67 percent, Mississippi and Tennessee with 66
percent, and Hawaii, Iowa, Vermont, and West Virginia with 65 percent.
'The
results are both shocking and saddening and they underscore why we must
act now while Holocaust survivors are still with us to voice their
stories,' said Gideon Taylor, the president of the Claims Conference.
'We
need to understand why we aren't doing better in educating a younger
generation about the Holocaust and the lessons of the past. This needs
to serve as a wake-up call to us all, and as a road map of where
government officials need to act,' Taylor said.
Records
show that around 17 million people, including six million Jews, were
murdered by Nazis as part of a state-sponsored genocide in the 1940s.
The study reveals that Wisconsin scores
highest in Holocaust awareness, while Arkansas scored the lowest, as
measured by a series of questions about the Holocaust.
Shockingly, 11 percent of U.S. Millennial and Gen Z respondents believed Jews caused the Holocaust.
In
New York, which has the highest Jewish population of any U.S. state, an
astounding 19 percent replied that they believed Jews caused the
Holocaust.
Nationally, 48 percent of
respondents could not name a single one of the more than 40,000
concentration camps or ghettos established during World War II.
As well, 56 percent of national U.S. Millennial and Gen Z respondents were unable to identify Auschwitz-Birkenau.
According to the survey, 49 percent of
young Americans have seen Holocaust denial or distortion posts on social
media or elsewhere online.
Nationally, 30
percent of respondents indicated that they had seen Nazi symbols on
their social media platforms or in their community. The state with the
highest response was Nevada with 70 percent.
The
Claims Conference, which commissioned the survey, is currently
conducting a campaign to pressure Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to remove
content from the platform that denies or distorts the Holocaust.
Survivors
from around the globe, including Anne Frank's stepsister, have recorded
30-second messages that are then posted on social media, including
Instagram and Twitter, with the hashtag #NoDenyingIt.
'I
lost all my family. Many, many family members. There is no denying it!
Remove Holocaust denial from Facebook,' Eva Schloss, Frank's stepsister,
says in her video.
'People who say the Holocaust did not
happen are calling me a liar. My fellow survivors and I are not liars.
We are witnesses,' said Sidney Zoltak, who also was among the survivors
featured in the footage.
Similar
videos will be posted daily urging Zuckerberg to remove
Holocaust-denying groups, pages and posts as hate speech. Videos will
also be posted on Facebook-owned Instagram, as well as Twitter.
Zuckerberg,
who is Jewish, sparked controversy in 2018 when he argued that Facebook
should not filter out posts denying that the Nazis killed six million
Jews.
In an interview with tech website Recode
he said that while Facebook was dedicated to stopping the spread of
fake news, it would not filter out posts just on the basis of being
factually wrong.
He said that while he
found Holocaust denial 'deeply offensive,' he said he didn't think
deniers were 'intentionally getting it wrong.'
The
non-profit Claims Conference works to seek compensation from the German
government and the return of Jewish property stolen by the Nazis.
EDITOR'S NOTE: As someone who had both sets of grandparents disappear in Nazi extermination camps, this really pisses me off. 19 percent of New Yorkers in the 18 to 39 age group believe Jews caused the Holocaust ... that's utterly shameful! That must be because our school curriculums have evolved to concentrate on the plight of blacks in America. Someone who believes Jews caused the extermination of six million Jews must have shit for brains.
1 comment:
For many people in America history began with the invention of the I-Phone and everything else is ancient and irrelevant. It is sad and shameful, but hardly surprising. Woeful ignorance and deliberate propaganda has a very deleterious effect on most people's knowledge of history.
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