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Wiesenthal: A Study Guide This study guide has been especially prepared for teachers and educators when taking a group of students to see Tom Dugan’s produc:on of “Wiesenthal” and should be used as a supplement to Holocaust educa:on. 1 © Katharine Farmer 2014 | OffBroadway Across America | [email protected]

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Page 1: Wiesenthal: A Study Guideattpac-website-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/assets/File/4416.pdf · Contents Introduc:on%…………………………………………………………………..…..3%

Wiesenthal: A Study Guide

This  study  guide  has  been  especially  prepared  for  teachers  and  educators  when  taking  a  group  of  students  to  see  Tom  Dugan’s  produc:on  of  “Wiesenthal”  and  should  be  used  as  

a  supplement  to  Holocaust  educa:on.  

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©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Contents Introduc:on  …………………………………………………………………..…..3  The  Play…………………………………………………………………………..….4  The  Theatre……………………………………………………………………..….5  Who  was  Simon  Wiesenthal?..............................................6-­‐8  Simon  Wiesenthal  Quotes……………………………………………………9  Meet  Tom  Dugan:  The  Writer…………………………………………….10  Meet  Tom  Dugan:  The  Actor………………………………………………11  Becoming  Simon  Wiesenthal……………………………………………..12  Why  is  Wiesenthal’s  legacy  important?.................................13  What  was  the  Holocaust?:  An:-­‐Semi:sm…………………………..14  What  was  the  Holocaust?:  The  Camps……………………………….15  What  was  the  Holocaust?:  Timeline……………………………...16-­‐18  What  was  the  Holocaust?  Libera:on………………………………….19  Survivors  of  the  Holocaust………………………………………………….20  Real  Accounts:  Anne  Frank…………………………………………………21  Real  Accounts:  Anne  Frank  Ac:vi:es………………………………….22  Real  Accounts:  Anne  Frank  and  Simon  Wiesenthal……………..23  Ac:vi:es  for  the  Classroom………………………………………………..24  Follow  Up  Discussion/Ac:vi:es…………………………………………..25  Middle  School  Further  Reading…………………………………………..26  Theatre  e:quebe………………..27  Glossary………………………….28-­‐36  Online  Resources…………………37  

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©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Introduction

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“If  we  do  not  honestly  try  to  understand  how  it  happened  then,  it  will  happen  now.”  –  Simon  Wiesenthal  

Why  teach  about  the  Holocaust?  

For  some,  the  Holocaust  is  s:ll  in  living  memory.  We  have  interviews  with,  books  wriben  by  and  photos  taken  of  Holocaust  survivors.  They  are  real  people  with  real  stories  –  and  these  real  memories  need  to  be  preserved  if  we  ever  want  to  prevent  such  an  atrocious  act  against  humanity  happening  again.  We  must  understand  and  remember  what  happened  during  the  Second  World  War  to  make  sure  that  such  an  event  never  happens  again.  This  couldn’t  be  more  important  in  a  world  fraught  with  poli:cal  turmoil.  Genocide  is  a  worldwide  issue,  it’s  happened  since  and  it  can  be  prevented.  As  Francis  Bacon  famously  said,  “knowledge  is  power”.  We  can  preserve  the  memory  of  the  Holocaust,  remember  the  dead,  move  forward  and  learn  from  what  previous  genera:ons  have  taught  us.    

Only  five  states  across  America  mandate  Holocaust  educa:on  within  the  curriculum.  Teaching  the  Holocaust  gives  students  the  awareness  of  discrimina:on,  racism  and  exposes  the  dangers  of  remaining  silent  and  apathe:c  to  the  oppression  of  others.  Holocaust  educa:on  also  teaches  about  the  use  and  abuse  of  power  and  the  responsibili:es  individuals,  organiza:ons  and  na:ons  have  when  confronted  with  human  rights  viola:ons  and  policies  of  genocide.  Although  it  is  important  to  be  sensi:ve,  students  should  understand  the  scale  of  the  Holocaust  to  understand  the  ramifica:ons  of  prejudice.    

The  Holocaust  was  a  crime  of  yesterday,  but  denial  is  the  crime  of  today.    

Sadly,  there  are  some  that  deny  that  the  holocaust  ever  happened.  Students  must  be  exposed  to  some  of  the  documenta:on  that  remains  revealing  what  went  on  in  the  concentra:on  camps.    

This  study  guide  aims  to  individualise  the  history  of  the  Holocaust  with  the  use  of  personal  stories.  In  par:cular  that  of  Simon  Wiesenthal,  a  Holocaust  survivor  who  dedicated  his  life  aker  libera:on  to  bringing  Nazi  war  criminals  to  jus:ce.    

The  schools  would  fail  through  their  silence,  the  Church  through  its  forgiveness,  and  the  home  through  the  denial  and  silence  of  the  parents.  The  new  genera>on  has  to  hear  what  the  older  genera>on  refuses  to  tell  it  –  Simon  Wiesenthal  in  his  book  “The  Sunflower”.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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“Wiesenthal”  is  a  full-­‐length,  one-­‐man  play  that  chronicles  the  life  of  the  Austrian-­‐Jewish  Holocaust  survivor  Simon  Wiesenthal,  who  became  interna:onally  famous  aker  World  War  II  for  his  relentless  pursuit  of  tracking  down  and  bringing  to  jus:ce  nearly  1,100  fugi:ve  Nazi  war  criminals.    

Wriben  by  and  starring  Tom  Dugan,  “Wiesenthal”  is  set  on  the  day  of  the  famed  Nazi  hunter’s  re:rement  while  packing  up  his  files,  Wiesenthal,  nicknamed  “The  Jewish  James  Bond,”  recounts  how,  aker  chea:ng  death  at  the  hands  of  Hitler’s  dreaded  S.S.  he  dedicated  his  life  to  the  pursuit  of  notorious  Nazi  villains,  including  Franz  Stangl,  the  Treblinka  death  camp  commandant;  Karl  Silberbauer,  the  S.S.  officer  who  imprisoned  Anne  Frank;  Franz  Murer,  “The  Butcher  of  Wilna”;  and  the  infamous  “Architect  of  the  Holocaust”  Adolph  Eichmann.  

With  warmth,  wit  and  surprising  humor,  veteran  actor  and  playwright  Tom  Dugan,  the  son  of  a  decorated  WWII  veteran,  portrays  the  aging  Wiesenthal  as  he  welcomes  his  final  group  of  students  to  The  Jewish  Documenta:on  Center  in  Vienna,  Austria.    

Wiesenthal,  formerly  en1tled  Nazi  Hunter  –  Simon  Wiesenthal,  is  an  extremely  popular  touring  produc1on  about  one  man’s  fight  against  Holocaust  amnesia,  is  an  important  theatrical  event  not  to  be  missed.  

The Play

Simon  Wiesenthal  

Tom  Dugan  playing  Simon  Wiesenthal  

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©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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The Theatre The  Acorn  Theatre  at  Theatre  Row  

THINK:  Why  has  a  sunflower  been  used  on  publicity  images?  What  does  a  sunflower  represent?  How  is  it  used  in  the  play?  

Theatre  Row  on  West    42nd  Street  in  New  York  City  is  a  complex  of  five  theatres.  The  Acorn  Theatre  is  the  largest  theatre  in  the  building,  with  a  maximum  capacity  of  199.    

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©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Who Was Simon Wiesenthal?

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 Simon  Wiesenthal  was  a  survivor  of  the  Nazi  death  camps,  and  aker  the  libera:on  of  concentra:on  camps  at  the  end  of  the  Second  World  War,  dedicated  his  life  to  documen:ng  the  crimes  of  the  Holocaust  and  bringing  the  perpetrators  to  jus:ce.  Nicknamed  the  “Jewish  James  Bond”,  Wiesenthal,  with  the  coopera:on  of  the  Israeli,  Austrian  and  former  West  German  governments,  discovered  nearly  1,100  Nazi  war  criminals.  Two  of  these  criminals  include  Adolf  Eichmann,  the  administrator  for  the  slaughter  of  the  Jews,  and  Erich  Rajakowitsch,  in  charge  of  the  death  transports  in  Holland.  Wiesenthal  founded  and  was  head  of  the  Jewish  Documenta:on  Center  in  Vienna,  where  most  of  this  research  was  undertaken.  He  has  wriben  his  memoirs  in  “The  Murderers  Among  Us”  and  other  books  including  “Sunflower”  and  “Sails  of  Hope”.    

Wiesenthal  was  born  on  December  31,  1908  in  Buczacz,  Ukraine.  For  a  brief  :me  aker  the  death  of  Wiesenthal’s  father  in  World  War  One,  Wiesenthal  and  his  mother  lived  in  Vienna,  Austria,  un:l  she  remarried  and  the  family  moved  back  to  Ukraine.  Wiesenthal  gained  a  degree    

in  Architectural  Engineering  from  the  University  of  Prague  in  1932.  He  then  began  working  in  an  architectural  office  in  Lvov  Ukraine  and  married  Cyla  Mueller  in  1936.  They  lived  happily  together  un:l  1939  when  Germany  and  Russia  signed  a  ‘non-­‐aggressive’  pact  and  agreed  to  par::on  Poland  between  them.  The  Russian  army  soon  occupied  Lvov  and  began  the  Red  Purge  of  Jewish  merchants,  factory  owners  and  other  professionals.  The  NKVD  arrested  his  stepfather,  who  later  died  in  prison,  his  brother  was  shot,  and  eventually  Wiesenthal  was  forced  to  close  his  business.  In  fear,  Wiesenthal  managed  to  save  his  wife,  mother  and  himself  from  deporta:on  to  Siberia  by  bringing  a  NKVD  commissar.  It  was  a  very  dangerous  :me  to  be  a  Jew.  

Aker  a  ini:al  deten:on  at  the  Janowska  concentra:on  camp,  Wiesenthal  and  his  wife  were  sent  to  do  forced  labor  in  the  Ostbahn  Works,  a  repair  shop  for  the  Lvov  Eastern  railway.  In  August  1942  his  mother  was  sent  to  Belzec  death  camp.  By  September,  most  of  Simon  and  Cyla’s  rela:ves  were  dead.  A  total  of  89  members  of  both  families  had  perished.  To  save  his  wife,  Wiesenthal  made  a  deal  with  Polish  underground  to  take  his  wife  to  Warsaw  with  false  papers,  as  she  could  easily  pass  as  an  Aryan  due  to  her  blonde  hair.  Cyla,  under  the  false  iden:ty  of  Irene  Kowalska,  lived  in  Poland  for  two  years  un:l  she  was  eventually  deported  to  the  Rhineland  and  was  forced  to  work  as  a  laborer.  Wiesenthal  managed  to  escape  the  Ostbahn  camp  with  the  help  of  deputy  director.  In  June  1944  he  was  then  recaptured  and  sent  back  to  Janowska,  where  he  almost  certainly  would  have  been  killed  had  the  German  eastern  front  not  collapsed  aker  the  advance  of  the  Red  Army.  With  only  34  living  prisoners  out  of  an  original  149,000,  the  200  guards  joined  the  general  retreat  westward.    

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Very  few  survived  the  westward  trek  through  Plaszow,  Gross  Rosen  and  Buchenwald,  which  ended  at  Mauthausen  in  upper  Austria.  Weighing  only  100  pounds,  Wiesenthal  was  barely  alive  when  Mauthausen  was  liberated  by  the  11th  Armored  Division  of  the  Third  U.S  Army  on  May  5,  1945.    

As  soon  as  his  heath  was  sufficiently  restored,  Wiesenthal  began  gathering  and  preparing  evidence  on  Nazi  atroci:es  for  the  War  Crimes  Sec:on  of  the  United  States  Army.  He  also  worked  for  the  Army’s  Office  of  Strategic  Services  and  Counter-­‐Intelligence  Corps  and  headed  the  Jewish  Central  Commibee  of  the  United  States  Zone  of  Austria.  

In  1945,  he  and  his  wife,  who  had  both  thought  the  other  to  be  dead,  were  reunited  at  last.  Their  daughter  Pauline  was  then  born  in  1946.    

Over  the  course  of  his  life,  Wiesenthal  painstakingly  culled  every  per:nent  document  and  record  he  got  and  listened  to  the  many  personal  accounts  told  to  him  by  survivors.    With  acumen,  thoroughness  and  inves:ga:ve  thinking,  he  pieced  together  the  most  obscure  and  incomplete  data  to  build  cases  solid  enough  to  stand  up  in  a  court  of  law.    

When  authori:es  failed  to  take  ac:on,  Wiesenthal  would  go  to  the  press  and  media,  as  over  the  course  of  his  career  as  a  Nazi  Hunter  discovered  that  publicity  and  an  outraged  public  opinion  were  powerful  weapons.    

Wiesenthal  was  oken  asked  to  explain  his  mo:ves  for  becoming  a  Nazi  Hunter.  According  to  Clyde  Farnsworth  in  the  New  York  Times  Magazine  (February  2  1964),  Wiesenthal  once  spent  the  Sabbath  at  home  with  a  former  Mauthausen  inmate,  now  a  well-­‐to-­‐do  jewelry  manufacturer.  Aker  dinner  the  host  asked  “Simon,  if  you  had  gone  back  to  building  houses,  you’d  be  a  millionaire.  Why  didn’t  you?”  “You’re  a  religious  man”,  replied  Wiesenthal,  “You  believe  in  God  and  life  aker  death.  I  also  believe  When  we  come  to  the  other  world  and  meet  the  millions  of  Jews  who  died  in  the  camps  and  they  ask  us,  ‘what  have  you  done?’  There  will  be  many  answers.  You  will  say,  ‘I  became  a  jeweler’,  another  will  say,  ‘I  have  smuggled  coffee  and  American  cigarebes’,  another  will  say  ‘I  built  houses’,  but  I  will  say  ‘I  did  not  forget  you’”.    

Wiesenthal  died  September  20,  2005  aged  96.  

Youtube.com  clip:  Sir  Ben  Kingsley  on  portraying  Simon  Wiesenthal  in  "Murderers  Among  Us”      -­‐  United  States  Holocaust  Memorial  Museum  hbps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlOl5b_caXA    

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Simon  Wiesenthal  pictured  in  1923  with  a  group  of  Boy  Scouts  of  which  he  was  the  leader  in  Buczacz,  Poland.  Only  one  of  these  boys  survived  the  Holocaust.    

A  portrait  of  Simon  Wiesenthal  and  his  wife  Cyla,  1936.    

Inmates  of  the  Mauthausen  concentra:on  camp,  where  Wiesenthal  was  ul:mately  liberated,  sewed  this  flag  in  secrecy  during  the  final  days  of  World  War  II.  It  contains  56  stars  (the  inmates  couldn't  remember  the  exact  number  of  states)  and  thirteen  stripes.    

The  libera:on  of  Mauthausen  by  Allied  forces  in  1945.    

Simon  Wiesenthal  at  the  Western  Wall  in  Jerusalem.    

Simon  Wiesenthal  at  the  opening  of  the  Museum  of  Tolerance,  1993.    

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©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Discovering  witnesses  is  just  as  important  as  catching  criminals.  (Quoted  in  the  introduc:on  to  The  Sunflower)  

For  your  benefit,  learn  from  our  tragedy.  It  is  not  a  wriJen  law  that  the  next  vic>ms  must  be  Jews.  It  can  also  be  other  people.  We  saw  it  begin  in  Germany  with  Jews,  but  people  from  more  than  twenty  other  na>ons  were  also  murdered.  When  I  started  this  work,  I  said  to  myself,  'I  will  look  for  the  murderers  of  all  the  vic>ms,  not  only  the  Jewish  vic>ms.  I  will  fight  for  jus>ce.'  (Quoted  in  an  interview  in  Penthouse  Magazine,  1983)  

The  history  of  man  is  the  history  of  crimes,  and  history  can  repeat.  So  informa>on  is  a  defense.  Through  this  we  can  build,  we  must  build,  a  defense  against  repe>>on.  (Bal1more  Jewish  Times,  February  24,  1989)    

Survival  is  a  privilege  which  entails  obliga>ons.  I  am  forever  asking  myself  what  I  can  do  for  those  who  have  not  survived.  The  answer  I  have  found  for  myself  (and  which  need  not  necessarily  be  the  answer  for  every  survivor)  is:  I  want  to  be  their  mouthpiece,  I  want  to  keep  their  memory  alive,  to  make  sure  the  dead  live  on  in  that  memory.  From  Jus1ce  not  Vengeance  (London  :  Weidenfeld  and  Nicolson,  1989(p.  351)    

Simon Wiesenthal Quotes

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Meet Tom Dugan: The Writer Like  most  young  kids  who  read  comic  books  and  jump  around  wearing  capes,  I  was  fascinated  by  the  idea  of  heroes.  And  like  most  kids,  my  biggest  hero  was  my  father,  Frank  Dugan,  a  staunch  Irish  Catholic.  He  considered  himself  an  ordinary  man,  and  was  the  tall,  silent,  humble  type,  for  whom  pride  was  a  sin.  So  it  wasn’t  un:l  I  was  a  teen  that  I  learned  (from  my  mother)  that  my  father  was,  in  fact,  a  real  hero  who  was  awarded  the  Bronze  Bable  Star  and  Purple  Heart  for  his  service  in  World  War  II.  I  began  to  pester  him  for  more  informa:on,  and  he  slowly  began  to  tell  me  of  his  experiences.  Of  all  of  the  stories  of  his  :me  in  Europe,  the  one  that  impressed  me  the  most  as  a  kid  was  when  his  unit  (the  83rd  Infantry)  liberated  the  Langenstein  concentra:on  camp  in  Germany.    I  was  riveted  by  the  extremes  of  the  situa:on  -­‐-­‐  unfathomable  cruelty  vs.  unexpected  kindness;  enormous  courage  vs.  revol:ng  cowardice.  Feeling  the  thirty-­‐five  year  old  shrapnel  under  his  skin,  I  said  to  him,  “Boy,  Dad,  you  must  really  hate  Germans.”  His  answer  surprised  me.  “Nope,  there  are  all  types  of  people,  good  and  bad.  I  don’t  judge  them  by  what  group  they  belong  to.  I  judge  them  by  how  they  behave.”    It  was  that  rejec:on  of  collec:ve  guilt  that  first  drew  me  to  Wiesenthal’s  story.    Simon  Wiesenthal  tracked  down  Nazi  war  criminals  and  brought  them  to  jus:ce.  He  also  defended  a  few  German  and  Austrian  officers  who  refused  to  par:cipate  in  “the  final  solu:on.”  He  not  only  fought  for  the  rights  of  Jewish  Holocaust  vic:ms,  but  also  for  Soviet,  Polish,  Gypsy,  Jehovah’s  Witness  and  homosexual  vic:ms.  Simon  tried  to  do  what  was  right,  but  he  was  not  a  hero  in  the  tradi:onal  sense.  Like  many  of  us,  he  didn’t  always  know  the  best  or  most  direct  path.  Some:mes  he  was  afraid.  Some:mes  he  had  doubts.  Some:mes  it  was  all  he  could  do  to  put  one  foot  in  front  of  the  other;  to  survive.  But  he  carried  on,  hoping  to  “fix  the  problem.”    This  ordinary  person  –  this  intelligent,  funny,  flawed,  noble  man  –  through  “persistence  and  paperwork”  brought  1,100  Nazi  war  criminals  to  jus:ce.  He  chose  ac:on  over  self-­‐pity,  jus:ce  over  revenge,  and  ul:mately  made  the  hardest  choice  of  all  –  to  trust  the  future.    If  an  ordinary  man  can  do  extraordinary  things,  perhaps  we  can,  too.  Perhaps  that  is  true  heroism.  

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Meet Tom Dugan: The Actor

Tom  Dugan  (Simon  Wiesenthal/Playwright)  received  the  Los  Angeles  Drama  Cri:cs’  Circle  Award  and  three  Ova:on  nomina:ons  for  his  portrayal  of  Simon  Wiesenthal.  Mr.  Dugan’s  Los  Angeles  and  regional  theatre  credits  include  Amadeus,  Misery,  The  Man  Who  Came  To  Dinner  and  On  Golden  Pond  (starring  Jack  Klugman).  His  TV  and  Film  credits  include  “Friends”,  “Bones”,  “Curb  Your  Enthusiasm”,  Kindergarten  Cop,  Dave,  The  Naked  Gun  and  his  personal  favourite  Leprechaun  III.  He  is  also  an  accomplished  playwright  whose  cri:cally  acclaimed  one-­‐man  plays  Oscar  to  Oscar,  Robert  E.  Lee  –  Shades  of  Gray,  The  Ghosts  of  Mary  Lincoln  and  Frederick  Douglass  –  In  The  Shadow  of  Slavery  (starring  Broadway’s  Mel  Johnson  Jr.)  have  been  produced  in  over  three  dozen  ci:es  across  the  United  States  and  Canada.    

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Becoming Simon Wiesenthal Whilst  watching  the  play,  think  about  how  costume  and  hair  is  used  to  create  Simon  Wiesenthal.  

How  is  gesture  and  body  language  used  to  represent  Simon  Wiesenthal?  

What  does  the  set  look  like?  What  does  it  communicate  to  the  audience  about  Simon  Wiesenthal?   12  

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During  the  Second  World  War  over  6  million  Jews,  gypsies,  Soviet  prisoners-­‐of-­‐war,  trade  unionists,  homosexuals  and  Jehovah’s  witnesses  were  mass  murdered  in  interment  camps  in  Germany  and  Eastern  Europe,  run  by  the  Nazi  party.    

Adolf  Eichmann  was  a  German  Nazi  SS  lieutenant  colonel,  and  one  of  the  major  organizers  of  the  Holocaust.  He  managed  the  mass  deporta:on  of  Jews  to  ghebos  and  extermina:on  camps  throughout  the  war.  In  par:cular,  he  oversaw  the  deporta:on  of  the  Jews  in  Hungary,  most  of  whom  were  sent  to  Auschwitz  concentra:on  camp  and  killed  on  arrival.    

Towards  the  end  of  the  war,  Eichmann  said  that  he  would  “leap  laughing  into  the  grave  because  the  feeling  that  he  had  five  million  people  on  his  conscience  would  be  for  him  a  source  of  extraordinary  sa:sfac:on”.    

He  fled  the  country  aker  Germany’s  defeat  in  1945  and  eventually  used  false  papers  to  escape  to  Argen:na  in  1950  where  he  lived  un:l  he  was  discovered  by  Israel’s  intelligence  agency,  which  confirmed  his  loca:on  in  1960.  Aker  a  huge,  media:sed  trial,  Eichmann  was  found  guilty  of  15  criminal  charges,  including  war  crimes,  crimes  against  humanity  and  crimes  against  the  Jewish  people,  and  was  hung  on  May  31  1962.    

Simon  Wiesenthal  said  “the  world  now  understands  the  concept  of  ‘desk  murderer’.  We  know  that  one  doesn’t  need  to  be  fantas:cal,  sadis:c,  or  mentally  ill  to  murder  millions;  that  it  is  enough  to  be  a  loyal  follower  eager  to  do  one’s  duty”.    

Wiesenthal  and  other  survivors  had  dedicated  their  lives  to  bringing  Nazi  war  criminals  to  jus:ce.  Wiesenthal  learned  of  a  leber  shown  to  him  in  1953  that  Eichmann  had  been  spobed  in  Buenos  Aires,  and  passed  the  informa:on  on  to  the  Israeli  consulate  in  1954.  S:ll  undiscovered,  Wiesenthal  ordered  private  detec:ves  to  secretly  take  photos  of  Adolf’s  brother  Obo  at  their  father’s  funeral  in  1960,  as  it  was  supposed  the  two  brothers  had  a  very  close  resemblance,  and  no  current  photos  of  Adolf  Eichmann  existed.  These  photographs  were  then  passed  on  to  the  Israeli  agents  in  February  and  Eichmann  was  later  discovered  in  May  1960,  not  far  from  his  home  in  Buenos  Aires.  

Aker  Wiesenthal’s  libera:on  from  Mauthausen-­‐Gusen  concentra:on  camp,  Wiesenthal  brought  over  1,100  Nazi  war  criminals  to  jus:ce,  dedica:ng  his  life  to  thorough  research  and  inves:ga:on.  Aker  the  capture  of  Eichmann,  Wiesenthal  reopened  the  Jewish  Documenta:on  Centre  in  Vienna,  which  he  had  previously  established    to  assemble  evidence  of  Nazi  war  criminals  but  had  closed  during  the  Cold  War.  This  was  a  small  office  in  the  old  Jewish  quarter  in  Vienna,  with  open  files  on  roughly  2000  cases.  However,  Wiesenthal  es:mated  that  there  were  approximately  150,000  Nazis  involved  in  war  crimes  and  his  archives  were  just  “the  :p  of  the  iceberg”.    

Why is Simon Wiesenthal’s Legacy Important?

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World  War  Two  –  1939-­‐1945  

The  term  “Holocaust”  is  problema:c  as  it  refers  to  a  biblical  sacrifice,  but  there  was  nothing  holy  about  the  mass  murder  of  the  Jews.    

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What Was The Holocaust?: Anti-Semitism

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An>-­‐Semi>sm  In  order  to  understand  what  the  Holocaust  was,  first  we  must  consider  the  founda:ons  of  an:-­‐Semi:sm.  An:-­‐Semi:sm  is  the  unfounded  hatred  of  Jews  as  a  na:onal,  racial  and  religious  group.  Jewish  communi:es  had  existed  in  Europe  for  over  2,000  years.  As  Chris:anity  emerged  as  the  dominant  religion  across  Europe,  Jews  were  rarely  given  ci:zen  status,  ostracized  for  not  accep:ng  the  religion  of  the  majority.    

Aker  World  War  One,  hos:lity  towards  Jews  across  Eastern  Europe  began  to  increase  due  to  economic  pressure,  radical  na:onalism,  an  upsurge  in  street  violence  and  fear  of  communism.    

During  Hitler’s  rise  to  power  in  the  1930s,  Jews  became  seen  as  “outsiders”  as  a  result  of  propaganda  that  amplified  an:-­‐Semi:sm.    In  1933,  there  were  600,000  Jews  living  in  Germany:  80%  German  ci:zens,  20%  immigrants  from  Eastern  Europe.  These  Jews  lived  in  urban  middle  class  areas,  were  prosperous  in  business  and  had  professions.    Over  the  course  of  6  years  leading  up  to  the  outbreak  of  World  War  Two  in  1939,  the  Nazi  Party  slowly  excluded  Jews  from  German  life.  They  lost  jobs,  their  ci:zenship  and  became  isolated  and  cut  off  from  society.  

The  beginning  of  the  Twen:eth  Century  was  a  dangerous  poli:cal  climate  to  be  a  Jew.  

         The  Holocaust  was  not  inevitable.  

“During  the  :me  of  my  struggle  for  power,  the  Jewish  race  received  my  prophecies  with  laughter  when  I  said  that  I  would  one  day  take  over  the  leadership  of  the  state…  and  that  I  would  then,  among  other  things,  seble  the  Jewish  problem”  –  Adolf  Hitler,  January  30  1939  

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         By  1939  around  50%  of  German  Jews  had  fled  to  neighboring  countries.  

         Sadly,  by  the  outbreak  of  the  war,  these  Jews  found  themselves  back                                            under  Nazi  control.    

         During  the  war,  Nazi  policy  shiked  from  forced  emigra:on  to                                              extermina:on.    

Following  the  German  invasion  of  Poland  in  September  1939,  the  Nazis  opened  forced-­‐labor  camps,  where  thousands  of  prisoners  died  from  exhaus:on  and  starva:on.  These  camps  were  guarded  by  the  German  SS  and  were  run  in  all  German  occupied  countries  including  Poland.  During  WW2,  these  camps  expanded  rapidly.  In  some  camps,  Nazi  doctors  performed  medical  experiments  on  prisoners  –  another  huge  viola:on  of  human  rights.    

To  facilitate  the  “final  solu:on”  the  Nazis  ordered  the  genocide  (or  mass  destruc:on)  of  the  Jews.  Concentra:on  camps  like  Auschwitz  in  Poland  were  expanded  to  become  killing  centers,  were  prisoners  would  eventually  be  shot  or  gassed  en  masse.  During  the  height  of  the  deporta:ons  to  Auschwitz,  up  to  6,000  Jews  and  other  prisoners  were  gassed  there  each  day.    

By  1945,  an  es:mated  6  million  Jews  had  been  murdered,  1,500,000  of  them  children.    

Only  a  small  number  of  those  in  the  camps  survived.    

Simon  Wiesenthal  was  one.  

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What Was The Holocaust?: The Camps

From  1933,  Nazi  Germany  established  a  number  of  deten:on  facili:es  to  imprison  and  eliminate  “enemies  of  the  state”.  Such  vic:ms  were  German  communists,  Social  Democrats,  gypsies,  Jehovah’s  Witnesses,  homosexuals  and  those  accused  of  “asocial”  behavior.  These  were  named  concentra:on  camps,  and  were  used  for  a  range  of  purposes  such  a  forced-­‐labor,  transit  or  for  mass  murder.  Hitler  was  trying  to  seize  complete,  totalitarian  control  over  Germany.  He  would  go  to  any  extreme  to  do  this.    

Genocide:  The  term  genocide  means  the  deliberate  and  systema:c  extermina:on  of  a  na:onal,  racial,  poli:cal  or  social  group.  

Growing  an:-­‐Semi:sm  in  Germany  was  spurred  on  by  the  state.  Josef  Goebbels,  the  Minister  for  Propaganda,  designed  ritual  rallies,  repeated  oaths  and  rousing  speeches  for  Hitler,  to  con:nually  reinforce  the  message  that  the  Jews  were  Germany’s  “misfortune”.    

Between  the  years  1933  and  1939,  an:-­‐Semi:sm  spread  across  Germany  and  surrounding  countries.  Nazi  policies  caused  the  degrada:on  of  the  Jews.  Laws  were  passed  banning  Jews  from  being  German  ci:zens,  boycobs  were  ordered  against  Jewish  businesses,  and  eventually  Jews  were  forbidden  to  immigrate  to  Switzerland.    

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What Was The Holocaust?: Timeline

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January  30,  1933:  President  Hindenburg  appoints  Adolf  Hitler  Chancellor  of  Germany.  

March  20,  1933:  SS  opens  the  Dachau  concentra:on  camp  outside  of  Munich.  

April  1,  1933:  Boycob  of  Jewish-­‐owned  shops  and  businesses  in  Germany.  

April  7,  1933:  Law  for  the  Reestablishment  of  the  Professional  Civil  Service.  

July  14,  1933:  Law  for  the  Preven:on  of  Progeny  with  Hereditary  Diseases.  

September  15,  1935:  Nuremberg  Race  Laws.  

March  16,  1935:  Germany  introduces  military  conscrip:on.  

March  7,  1936:  German  troops  march  unopposed  into  the  Rhineland.  

August  1,  1936:  Summer  Olympics  begin  in  Berlin.  

March  11-­‐13,  1938:  Germany  incorporates  Austria  in  the  Anschluss  (Union).  

November  9/10,  1938:  Kristallnacht  (na:onwide  pogrom  in  Germany).  

May  13,  1939:  The  St.  Louis  sails  from  Hamburg,  Germany.  

September  29,  1938:  Munich  Agreement.  

August  23,  1939:  Nazi-­‐Soviet  Nonaggression  Agreement.  

September  1,  1939:  Germany  invades  Poland,  star:ng  World  War  II  in  Europe.  

September  17,  1939:  The  Soviet  Union  occupies  Poland  from  the  east.  

October  8,  1939:  Germans  establish  a  ghebo  in  Piotrków  Trybunalski,  Poland.  

April  9,  1940:  Germany  invades  Denmark  and  Norway.  

May  10,  1940:  Germany  abacks  western  Europe  (France  and  the  Low  Countries).  

July  10,  1940:  Bable  of  Britain  begins.  

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April  6,  1941:  Germany  invades  Yugoslavia  and  Greece.  

June  22,  1941:  Germany  invades  the  Soviet  Union.  

July  6,  1941:  Einsatzgruppen  (mobile  killing  units)  shoot  nearly  3,000  Jews  at  the  Seventh  Fort,  one  of  the  19th-­‐century  for:fica:ons  surrounding  Kovno.  

August  3,  1941:  Bishop  Clemens  August  Graf  von  Galen  of  Muenster  denounces  the  “euthanasia”  killing  program  in  a  public  sermon.  

September  28-­‐29,  1941:  Einsatzgruppen  shoot  about  34,000  Jews  at  Babi  Yar,  outside  Kiev.    

November  7,  1941:  Einsatzgruppen  round  up  13,000  Jews  from  the  Minsk  ghebo  and  kill  them  in  nearby  Tuchinki  (Tuchinka).  

November  30,  1941:  Einsatzgruppen  shoot  10,000  Jews  from  the  Riga  ghebo  in  the  Rumbula  Forest.  

December  6,  1941:  Soviet  winter  counteroffensive.  

December  7,  1941:  Japan  bombs  Pearl  Harbor  and  the  United  States  declares  war  the  next  day.  

December  8,  1941:  The  first  killing  opera:ons  begin  at  Chelmno  in  occupied  Poland.  

December  11,  1941:  Nazi  Germany  declares  war  on  the  United  States.  

January  16,  1942:  Germans  begin  the  mass  deporta:on  of  more  than  65,000  Jews  from  Lodz  to  the  Chelmno  killing  center.  

January  20,  1942:  Wannsee  Conference  held  near  Berlin,  Germany.  

March  27,  1942:  Germans  begin  the  deporta:on  of  more  than  65,000  Jews  from  Drancy,  outside  Paris,  to  the  east  (primarily  to  Auschwitz).  

June  28,  1942:  Germany  launches  a  new  offensive  towards  the  city  of  Stalingrad.  

July  15,  1942:  Germans  begin  mass  deporta:ons  of  nearly  100,000  Jews  from  the  occupied  Netherlands  to  the  east  (primarily  to  Auschwitz).  

July  22,  1942:  Germans  begin  the  mass  deporta:on  of  over  300,000  Jews  from  the  Warsaw  ghebo  to  the  Treblinka  killing  center.  

September  12,  1942:  Germans  complete  the  mass  deporta:on  of  about  265,000  Jews  from  Warsaw  to  Treblinka.  

November  23,  1942:  Soviet  troops  counteraback  at  Stalingrad,  trapping  the  German  Sixth  Army  in  the  city.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

April  19,  1943:  Warsaw  ghebo  uprising  begins.  

July  5,  1943:  Bable  of  Kursk.  

October  1,  1943:  Rescue  of  Jews  in  Denmark.  

November  6,  1943:  Soviet  troops  liberate  Kiev.  

March  19,  1944:  Germans  forces  occupy  Hungary.  

May  15,  1944:  Germans  begin  the  mass  deporta:on  of  about  440,000  Jews  from  Hungary.  

June  6,  1944:  D-­‐Day:  Allied  forces  invade  Normandy,  France.  

June  22,  1944:  The  Soviets  launch  an  offensive  in  eastern  Belorussia  (Belarus).  

July  25,  1944:  Anglo-­‐American  forces  break  out  of  Normandy.  

August  1,  1944:  Warsaw  Polish  uprising  begins.  

August  15,  1944:  Allied  forces  land  in  southern  France.  

August  25,  1944:  Libera:on  of  Paris.  

December  16,  1944:  Bable  of  the  Bulge.  

January  12,  1945:  Soviet  winter  offensive.  

January  18,  1945:  Death  march  of  nearly  60,000  prisoners  from  the  Auschwitz  camp  system  in  southern  Poland.  

January  25,  1945:  Death  march  of  nearly  50,000  prisoners  from  the  Stubhof  camp  system  in  northern  Poland.  

January  27,  1945:  Soviet  troops  liberate  the  Auschwitz  camp  complex.  

March  7,  1945:  US  troops  cross  the  Rhine  River  at  Remagen.  

April  16,  1945:  The  Soviets  launch  their  final  offensive,  encircling  Berlin.  

April  29,  1945:  American  forces  liberate  the  Dachau  concentra:on  camp.  

April  30,  1945:  Adolf  Hitler  commits  suicide.  

May  7,  1945:  Germany  surrenders  to  the  western  Allies.  

May  9,  1945:  Germany  surrenders  to  the  Soviets.  

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What was the Holocaust?: Liberation

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 The  first  soldiers  to  liberate  concentra:on  camps  were  from  the  Soviet  Union.  On  July  23,  1944,  they  entered  the  Majdanek  camp  in  Poland.  Later  they  entered  Auschwitz  on  January  27,  1945,  to  find  hundreds  of  sick  and  exhausted  prisoners.  The  Germans  had  fled,  living  behind  vic:ms  belongings  such  as  348,820  men’s  suits,  836,255  women’s  coats  and  tens  of  thousands  of  pairs  of  shoes.    

Bri:sh,  American,  Canadian  and  French  troops  also  freed  prisoners  from  camps.  The  

Americans  were  responsible  for  libera:ng  20,000  prisoners  in  Buchenwald  and  for  libera:ng  other  camps  such  as  Dachau  and  Mauthausen.  Although  the  Germans  tried  desperately  to  hide  what  they  had  been  doing  within  the  camps,  the  Allied  soldiers  came  across  thousands  of  dead  bodies  and  hundreds  of  barely  living  survivors  who  lived  to  tell  the  tale.    

An  American  army  journalist  named  Bill  Barreb  described  what  he  saw  when  he  arrived  at  Dachau:  “there  were  about  a  dozen  bodies  in  the  dirty  boxcar,  men  and  women  alike.  They  had  gone  without  food  so  long  that  their  dead  wrists  were  brooms:cks  :pped  with  claws.  These  were  the  vic:ms  of  a  deliberate  starva:on  diet..."  

Despite  the  efforts  by  Allied  troops  to  nurse  the  malnourished  survivors,  many  died,  too  weak  to  digest  the  food.  Half  the  prisoners  discovered  alive  in  Auschwitz  died  within  a  few  days  of  being  freed.    

Those  who  did  survive  had  mixed  feelings  about  their  newfound  freedom.  Many  had  lost  all  or  nearly  all  of  their  family  members  and  many  suffered  survivors  guilt.  Survivors  faced  a  long  and  difficult  road  to  recovery.    

Only  aker  the  libera:on  of  these  camps  was  the  full  scope  of  the  Nazi  horrors  exposed  to  the  world.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Survivors of the Holocaust

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©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Real Accounts: Anne Frank

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Anne  Frank  was  a  young  girl  born  into  a  Jewish  family  in  Germany  in  1929.  By  1934  the  Frank  family  had  fled  Germany  and  sebled  in  Amsterdam  in  fear  of  the  Nazis  and  the  growing  an:-­‐Semi:sm  spreading  across  the  country.  On  her  thirteenth  birthday  Anne  received  an  autograph  book  and  she  decides  to  use  it  as  a  diary,  documen:ng  her  experiences  of  growing  up  Jewish  in  the  Second  World  War.  Her  elder  sister  Margot  is  shortly  ordered  by  the  Nazis  to  report  to  a  work  camp  and  in  fear  the  Frank  family  go  into  hiding.  Over  the  course  of  the  next  two  years,  Anne,  Margot,  their  father  Obo,  mother  Edith  and  the  Van  Daan  family  stay  in  a  secret  annex  hidden  in  an  office  run  by  Miep  Gies.  The  two  families  live  their  safely  un:l  1944    when  the  annex  is  raided  by  German  police.  The  Franks  and  the  Van  Daans  are  sent  to  Westerbork  transit  camp  and  then  deported  to  the  concentra:on  camp,  Auschwitz  in  September  1944.  In  October,  Anne  and  her  sister  are  sent  to  Bergen-­‐Belsen  concentra:on  camp,  where  Anne  dies  of  typhus  in  March  1945,  aged  15.  On  May  7  1945  the  Germans  surrender  and  the  war  ends.  

Anne  Frank’s  diary  has  been  key  to  individualizing  history  and  helping  us  understand  the  human  cost  of  war.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Real Accounts: Anne Frank Activities

Date  of  diary  entry   Theme  or  subject   Suggested  literacy  ac>vi>es  

June  12  1942,  June  14  1942   Anne  receives  the  diary   Recount  

June  21  1942   About  wri:ng  a  diary  and  the  crea:on  of  Kiby   Leber  wri:ng  

June  21  1942   Anne  at  school   Recount  or  play-­‐script  or  wri:ng  in  a  text/voice  style  

July  9  1942   Descrip:on  of  the  “Secret  Annex”   Descrip:on  

October  20  1942   Almost  discovered   Composi:on,  summary  (suspense)  

November  17  1942   Rules  and  regula:ons   List  or  instruc:onal  text  

November  19  1942   Life  outside  persecu:on   Descrip:on  or  recount  

December  13  1942   Life  outside   Note  taking,  descrip:on  or  recount  

May  18  1943   Air  raid   Note  taking,  descrip:on,  retelling  in  leber  form,  newspaper  report  or  summary  

August  4  1943   A  nigh�me  rou:ne   Recount  

September  16  1943   Fear  and  rela:onships   Recount  

November  8  1943     Moods   Descrip:on  

November  11  1943   A  special  thing  is  lost   Recount,  descrip:on  or  summary  

February  8  1944   Ge�ng  on  each  other’s  nerves   Descrip:on  or  play-­‐script  

March  7  1944   Looking  back   Descrip:on  or  recount  

April  6  1944   Hobbies   Descrip:on  

April  11  1944   Burglars   Long  extract,  note  taking,  recount,  retelling  in  leber  form,  composi:on  or  police  report  

May  22  1944   An:-­‐Semi:sm   Comment  on  an  emo:ve  issue,  report  on  controversial  issue  or  persuasive  text    

Useful  Extracts  From  Anne  Frank’s  Diary:  

22  

-­‐   Imagine  you  are  Anne  Frank.  Write  a  diary  entry  as  if  you  were  in  hiding.  What  rules  and  regula:ons  would  you  have  to  follow?  How  would  you  obtain  food?  What  deprava:ons  would  you  face?  How  would  you  feel  about  your  loss  of  independence  and  freedom?  -­‐   What  dangers  did  Miep  Gies  and  others  face  when  hiding  Jews  in  their  homes  and  offices?  What  would  happen  if  they  were  discovered?  How  would  you  cope  with  this  fear?  -­‐   In  what  ways  does  looking  at  personal  accounts  of  World  War  Two  change  your  understanding  of  the        war?    -­‐   What  items  would  you  take  if  you  went  into  hiding?  -­‐   What  impact  can  one  person’s  words  have  on  the  world?  -­‐   What  would  a  diary  entry  be  like  today?  (Blog/Twiber/Social  Media)  What  impact  could  this  have?  How  could  it  be  used?  -­‐   How  does  Anne  Frank  present  herself  in  her  diary?  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Real Accounts: Anne Frank and Simon Wiesenthal

23  Karl  Silberbauer   The  Annex   Residents  of  the  secret  annex  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Activities for the Classroom

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

•  In  groups,  use  the  internet  and  books  to  research  and  present  to  the  class  one  concentra:on  camp.  When  was  it  built?  How  was  it  run  and  what  did  it  look  like?  Students  should  consider  the  living  condi:ons  of  the  prisoners  and  viola:on  of  human  rights  that  went  on.  

•  Think  about  what  kind  of  music  would  be  good  for  the  play.  How  does  music  and  sound  effects  change  your  understanding  of  the  play  and  inform  your  knowledge  of  the  se�ng/:me  period?  

•In  an  essay,  discuss  the  work  of  Simon  Wiesenthal.  What  did  he  do?  Was  his  work  born  out  of  revenge  or  was  he  seeking  jus:ce?  Did  his  work  have  any  impact  on  the  rest  of  the  world?  What  can  be  learnt  from  Simon  Wiesenthal?  How  does  he  compare  to  other  Holocaust  survivors?  

•  Look  at  other  presenta:ons  of  Simon  Wiesenthal  in  theatre,  film,  documentary  and  in  books.  How  does  this  compare  to  Tom  Dugan’s  performance?  

•  Find  a  present-­‐day  example  of  genocide  or  an:-­‐Semi:sm.  What  are  the  roots  of  this  situa:on?  What  steps  should  ci:zens  and  organiza:ons  take  to  raise  awareness  and  bring  about  change?  What  ways  can  we  make  a  difference?  How  can  we  prevent  it  happening  again?  

•In  October  2009,  President  Barack  Obama  signed  the  Mabhew  Shepard  and  James  Byrd  Jr.  Hate  Crimes  Preven:on  Act  into  law.  Who  were  Mabhew  Shepard  and  James  Byrd,  and  in  what  ways  were  they  targets  of  hate?  What  protec:ons  does  this  new  law  provide?  

•There  are  a  range  of  documentaries  available  on  the  Holocaust  that  can  be  shown  to  a  class.  For  example:  hbp://www.ushmm.org/learn/introduc:on-­‐to-­‐the-­‐holocaust/path-­‐to-­‐nazi-­‐genocide    

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Follow Up Discussions/Activities

How  was  design  (set,  costume,  ligh:ng,  sound)  used  and  how  did  it  improve  your  understanding  of  Wiesenthal’s  story?  

Consider  Tom  Dugan’s  performance  of  Wiesenthal.  How  may  he  have  researched  Wiesenthal’s  movements,  mannerisms  and  known  what  he  might  have  said?  Do  you  think  it  was  a  realis:c  impression?  Did  you  feel  as  if  you  were  in  the  room  with  a  Holocaust  survivor?    

How  did  the  play  inform  your  knowledge  of  the  Holocaust?  

Has  the  play  encouraged  you  to  reconsider  events  of  the  Holocaust?  Has  it  made  you  think  differently?  What  may  have  changed  in  your  impressions  of  the  theatre,  of  Simon  Wiesenthal  and  has  it  encouraged  you  to  study  further  into  the  events  of  the  Second  World  War?  

How  would  you  have  staged  the  show  differently?  

Design  your  own  poster  for  the  show.  What  would  your  publicity  image  be?  What  colors  would  you  use?  

Make  a  set  design  for  the  play.  

If  you  were  to  write  a  play  about  the  events  of  the  Second  World  War,  what  would  you  write  about?  What  characters  would  you  include?  Would  they  be  based  on  real  people  and  real  events?  Or  would  you  create  a  fic:onal  plot?  How  would  design  elements  be  used?   25  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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26  ©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

Middle School Further Reading Number  the  Stars  –  Lois  Lowry  Ten-­‐year-­‐old  Annemarie  Johansen  and  her  best  friend  Ellen  Rosen  oken  think  of  life  before  the  war.  It's  now  1943  and  their  life  in  Copenhagen  is  filled  with  school,  food  shortages,  and  the  Nazi  soldiers  marching  through  town.  When  the  Jews  of  Denmark  are  "relocated,"  Ellen  moves  in  with  the  Johansens  and  pretends  to  be  one  of  the  family.  Soon  Annemarie  is  asked  to  go  on  a  dangerous  mission  to  save  Ellen's  life.  

The  Upstairs  Room  –  Johanna  Reis  In  the  part  of  the  marketplace  where  flowers  had  been  sold  twice  a  week  -­‐  tulips  in  the  spring,  roses  in  the  summer  -­‐  stood  German  tanks  and  German  soldiers.  Annie  de  Leeuw  was  eight  years  old  in  1940  when  the  Germans  abacked  Holland  and  marched  into  the  town  of  Winterswijk  where  she  lived.  Annie  was  ten  when,  because  she  was  Jewish  and  in  great  danger  of  being  captured  by  the  invaders,  she  and  her  sister  Sini  had  to  leave  their  father,  mother,  and  older  sister  Rachel  to  go  into  hiding  in  the  upstairs  room  of  a  remote  farmhouse.  

Jacob’s  Rescue  –  Malka  Drucker  and  Michael  Halperin  Jacob  Gutgeld  lived  with  his  family  in  a  beau:ful  house  in  Warsaw,  Poland.    He  went  to  school  and  played  hide-­‐and-­‐seek  in  the  woods  with  his  friends.  But  everything  changed  the  day  the  Nazi  soldiers  invaded  in  1939.  Suddenly  it  wasn't  safe  to  be  Jewish  anymore.  In  answer  to  his  daughter's  ques:ons,  a  man  recalls  the  terrifying  years  of  his  childhood  when  a  brave  Polish  couple,  Alex  and  Mela  Roslan,  hid  him  and  other  Jewish  children  from  the  Nazis.    This  is  based  on  a  true  story.  

The  Devil  in  Vienna  –  Doriz  Orgel  This  book  is  based  on  the  author’s  own  experience  in  Vienna  in  1937-­‐38.    It  is  the  story  of  a  young  Jewish  girl,  Inge,  and  her  best  friencd  who  is  a  member  of  Hitler’s  Youth  and  how  they  try  to  maintain  their  friendship  during  this  period.  

Friedrich  –  Hans  Peter  Richter  This  is  the  tragic  story  of  a  young  Jewish  boy  in  Germany  in  the  1930s,  seen  through  the  eyes  of  a  friend.    It  tells  of  the  destruc:on  of  an  en:re  Jewish  family  while  tracing  the  history  of  an:-­‐Jewish  laws  and  regula:ons  from  1933-­‐1945.  

Torn  Thread  –  Anne  Isaacs  Twelve-­‐year-­‐old  Eva  and  her  sister  have  been  forced  to  leave  their  home  in  Poland  and  are  imprisoned  in  a  Nazi  labor  camp.  There  they  must  spin  thread  on  treacherous  machinery  to  make  clothing  and  blankets  for  the  German  Army.  As  Eva  struggles  amid  ever  worsening  dangers  to  save  her  life  and  that  of  her  sick  sister,  readers  witness  how  two  teenagers  strive  to  create  home  and  family  amidst  inhumanity  and  chaos.  Wriben  in  exquisite  prose,  this  story  of  heartbreak  and  hope  that  is  rich  in  detail  and  symbolism  will  deeply  move  readers  of  all  ages.  

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Theatre Etiquette For  your  informa>on,  the  show  runs  at  85  minutes  with  no  intermission.    

We  kindly  ask  you  to  remind  your  students  that  the  use  of  cell  phones,  iPods,  and  other  electronic  devices  during  the  performance  are  strictly  prohibited.    

We  encourage  school  par:es  to  arrive  30  minutes  prior  to  a  performance  as  no  late  admission  is  allowed.    

We  suggest  that  teachers  sit  amongst  students  to  ensure  that  they  remain  quiet  during  the  show,  in  respect  of  actors  and  their  fellow  audience  members.  

Please  only  bring  bobled  water  into  the  theatre.    

Chewing  gum  is  also  prohibited.  

Please  do  not  allow  your  students  to  use  photography  or  video  recording  within  the  theatre.  

Before  you  arrive  at  the  theatre,  we  suggest  that  you  ask  your  students  to  think  about  what  they  would  like  to  ask  Tom  Dugan  in  the  “talkback”  session.  Help  them  focus  ques:ons  that  are  directly  related  to  the  play.    Students  may  also  be  interested  to  know  more  about  the  technical  and  scenic  elements  of  the  performance.    

Thank  you  so  much  for  bringing  your  students  to  see  “Wiesenthal”.    

If  you  have  any  ques:ons  or  comments  on  how  we  can  make  this  a  beber  experience  for  your  students,  please  do  not  hesitate  to  contact  me  directly  on  [email protected]  or  on  (805)  667-­‐2912  ex.  242.  

Sincerely,    

Katharine  Farmer  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Glossary

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Allies:  During  World  War  II,  the  group  of  na:ons  including  the  United  States,  Britain,  the  Soviet  Union,  and  the  Free  French,  who  joined  in  the  war  against  Germany  and  other  Axis  countries.  Anschluss:  The  annexa:on  of  Austria  by  Germany  on  March  13,  1938.  An>-­‐Semi>sm:  Opposi:on  to  and  discrimina:on  against  Jews.  Aryan:  A  term  for  peoples  speaking  the  language  of  Europe  and  India.  In  Nazi  racial  theory,  a  person  of  pure  German  "blood."  The  term  "non-­‐Aryan"  was  used  to  designate  Jews,  part-­‐Jews  and  others  of  supposedly  inferior  racial  stock.  Assimila>on:  The  process  of  becoming  incorporated  into  mainstream  society.  Strict  observance  of  Jewish  laws  and  customs  pertaining  to  dress,  food,  and  religious  holidays  tends  to  keep  Jewish  people  separate  and  dis:nct  from  the  culture  of  the  country  within  which  they  are  living.  Moses  Mendelssohn  (1729-­‐86),  a  German  Jew,  was  one  of  the  key  people  working  for  the  assimila:on  of  the  Jews  in  the  German  cultural  community.  Auschwitz  –  Birkenau:  A  complex  consis:ng  of  concentra:on,  extermina:on,  and  labor  camps  in  Upper  Silesia.  It  was  established  in  1940  as  a  concentra:on  camp  and  included  a  killing  center  in  1942.  Auschwitz  I:  The  main  camp.  Auschwitz  II  (Also  known  as  Birkenau):  The  extermina:on  center.  Auschwitz  III  (Monowitz):  The  I.G.  Farben  labor  camp,  also  known  as  Buna.  In  addi:on,  there  were  numerous  subsidiary  camps.  Axis:  Germany,  Italy,  and  Japan,  signatories  to  a  pact  signed  in  Berlin  on  September  27,  1940,  to  divide  the  world  into  their  spheres  of  respec:ve  poli:cal  interest.  They  were  later  joined  by  Bulgaria,  Croa:a,  Hungary,  Romania,  and  Slovakia.  Babi  Yar:  A  ravine  in  Kiev,  where  tens  of  thousands  of  Ukrainian  Jews  were  systema:cally  massacred.  Bar-­‐Mitzvah/Bat-­‐Mitzvah:  A  term  referring  to  a  religious  "coming  of  age"  in  Judaism,  when  a  Jewish  boy  or  girl  turns  thirteen.  On  this  day,  the  Bar/Bat  Mitzvah  leads  the  congrega:on  in  the  service  and  righ�ully  enters  the  congrega:on  as  an  "equal"  member.  Beer  Hall  Putsch:  On  November  8,  1923,  Hitler,  with  the  help  of  SA  troops  and  German  World  War  I  hero  General  Erich  Ludendorff,  launched  a  failed  coup  abempt  in  Bavaria  at  a  mee:ng  of  Bavarian  officials  in  a  beer  hall.  Belzec:  Nazi  extermina:on  camp  in  eastern  Poland.  Erected  in  1942.  Approximately  550,000  Jews  were  murdered  there  in  1942  and  1943.  The  Nazis  dismantled  the  camp  in  the  fall  of  1943.  Bergen-­‐Belsen:  Nazi  concentra:on  camp  in  northwestern  Germany.  Erected  in  1943.  Thousands  of  Jews,  poli:cal  prisoners,  and  POWs  were  killed  there.  Liberated  by  Bri:sh  troops  in  April  1945,  although  many  of  the  remaining  prisoners  died  of  typhus  aker  libera:on.  Blitzkrieg:  Meaning  "lightning  war,"  Hitler's  offensive  tac:c  using  a  combina:on  of  armored  aback  and  air  assault.  Blood  Libel:  An  allega:on,  recurring  during  the  thirteenth  through  sixteenth  centuries,  that  Jews  were  killing  Chris:an  children  to  use  their  blood  for  the  ritual  of  making  unleavened  bread  (matzah).  A  red  mold  which  occasionally  appeared  on  the  bread  started  this  myth.  B'richa:  The  organized  and  illegal  mass  movement  of  Jews  throughout  Europe  following  World  War  II.  Bri>sh  White  Paper  of  1939:  Bri:sh  policy  of  restric:ng  immigra:on  of  Jews  to  Pales:ne.  Brüning,  Heinrich:  Appointed  by  President  von  Hindenburg  in  1930,  he  was  the  first  chancellor  under  the  new  presiden:al  system  which  ruled  by  emergency  decree  rather  than  laws  passed  by  the  Reichstag.  Buchenwald:  Concentra:on  camp  in  North  Central  Germany.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Bund:  The  Jewish  Socialist  Party  founded  in  1897.  It  aspired  to  equal  rights  for  the  Jewish  popula:on.  During  World  War  II  the  Bund  was  ac:ve  in  the  underground  resistance  and  some  Bund  members  were  also  part  of  some  Judenrat  councils.  They  took  part  in  the  Warsaw  Ghebo  Uprising.  Bystander:  One  who  is  present  at  some  event  without  par:cipa:ng  in  it.  Cabaret:  Large  restaurant  providing  food,  drink,  music,  a  dance  floor,  and  floor  show.  Cantor:  Leader  of  chanted  prayers  in  a  Jewish  service;  the  congrega:onal  singer.  Chancellor:  Chief  (prime)  minister  of  Germany.  Chamberlain,  Neville  (1869-­‐1940):  Bri:sh  Prime  Minister,  1937-­‐1940.  He  concluded  the  Munich  Agreement  in  1938  with  Adolf  Hitler,  which  he  mistakenly  believed  would  bring  "peace  in  our  :me.  Chelmno:  Nazi  extermina:on  camp  in  western  Poland.  Established  in  1941.  The  first  of  the  Nazi  extermina:on  camps.  Approximately  150,000  Jews  were  murdered  there  between  late  1941  and  1944,  although  not  con:nuously.  In  comparison  to  the  other  extermina:on  camps,  Chelmno  was  technologically  primi:ve,  employing  carbon  monoxide  gas  vans  as  the  main  method  of  killing.  The  Nazis  dismantled  the  camp  in  late  1944  and  early  1945.  Collabora>on:  Coopera:on  between  ci:zens  of  a  country  and  its  occupiers.  Communism:  A  concept  or  system  of  society  in  which  the  collec:ve  community  shares  ownership  in  resources  and  the  means  of  produc:on.  In  theory,  such  socie:es  provide  for  equal  sharing  of  all  work,  according  to  ability,  and  all  benefits,  according  to  need.  In  1848,  Karl  Marx,  in  collabora:on  with  Friedrich  Engels,  published  the  Communist  Manifesto  which  provided  the  theore:cal  impetus  for  the  Russian  Bolshevik  Revolu:on  in  1917.  Concentra>on  camp:  Concentra:on  camps  were  prisons  used  without  regard  to  accepted  norms  of  arrest  and  deten:on.  They  were  an  essen:al  part  of  Nazi  systema:c  oppression.  Ini:ally  (1933-­‐36),  they  were  used  primarily  for  poli:cal  prisoners.  Later  (1936-­‐42),  concentra:on  camps  were  expanded  and  non-­‐poli:cal  prisoners-­‐-­‐Jews,  Gypsies,  homosexuals,  and  Poles-­‐-­‐were  also  incarcerated.  In  the  last  period  of  the  Nazi  regime  (1942-­‐45),  prisoners  of  concentra:on  camps  were  forced  to  work  in  the  armament  industry,  as  more  and  more  Germans  were  figh:ng  in  the  war.  Living  condi:ons  varied  considerably  from  camp  to  camp  and  over  :me.  The  worst  condi:ons  took  place  from  1936-­‐42,  especially  aker  the  war  broke  out.  Death,  disease,  starva:on,  crowded  and  unsanitary  condi:ons,  and  torture  were  a  daily  part  of  concentra:on  camps.  Contra  fact:  A  musical  technique  that  places  new  lyrics  into  melodies  of  old  songs.  This  technique  was  used  during  the  Holocaust,  when  lyrics  were  being  wriben  faster  than  composers  could  generate  the  music.  Dachau:  Nazi  concentra:on  camp  in  southern  Germany.  Erected  in  1933,  this  was  the  first  Nazi  concentra:on  camp.  Used  mainly  to  incarcerate  German  poli:cal  prisoners  un:l  late  1938,  whereupon  large  numbers  of  Jews,  Gypsies,  Jehovah's  Witnesses,  homosexuals,  and  other  supposed  enemies  of  the  state  and  an:-­‐social  elements  were  sent  as  well.  Nazi  doctors  and  scien:sts  used  many  prisoners  at  Dachau  as  guinea  pigs  for  experiments.  Dachau  was  liberated  by  American  troops  in  April  1945.  Death  camp:  Nazi  extermina:on  centers  where  Jews  and  other  vic:ms  were  brought  to  be  killed  as  part  of  Hitler's  Final  Solu:on.  Death  marches:  Forced  marches  of  prisoners  over  long  distances  and  under  intolerable  condi:ons  was  another  way  vic:ms  of  the  Third  Reich  were  killed.  The  prisoners,  guarded  heavily,  were  treated  brutally  and  many  died  from  mistreatment  or  were  shot.  Prisoners  were  transferred  from  one  ghebo  or  concentra:on  camp  to  another  ghebo  or  concentra:on  camp  or  to  a  death  camp.  Degenerate  art  (Entartete  Kunst):  Art  which  did  not  fit  the  Nazi  ideal.  Dehumaniza>on:  The  Nazi  policy  of  denying  Jews  basic  civil  rights  such  as  prac:cing  religion  ,  educa:on,  and  adequate  housing.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Desecra>ng  the  Host:  Jews  were  accused  of  defiling  the  Host,  the  sacred  bread  used  in  the  Eucharist  ritual,  with  blood.  The  red  substance  that  can  grow  on  bread  which  has  a  blood-­‐like  appearance  is  now  known  to  be  a  mold.  This  allega:on  was  used  as  the  reason  for  a  series  of  an:semi:c  abacks.  Diaspora:  From  the  Greek  word  meaning  dispersion,  the  term  dates  back  to  556  B.C.E.  when  Nebuchadnezzar  exiled  the  Judeans  to  Babylonia  and  refers  to  the  Jewish  communi:es  outside  Israel.  Displacement:  The  process,  either  official  or  unofficial,  of  people  being  involuntarily  moved  from  their  homes  because  of  war,  government  policies,  or  other  societal  ac:ons,  requiring  groups  of  people  to  find  new  places  to  live.  Displacement  is  a  recurring  theme  in  the  history  of  the  Jewish  people.  DP:  Displaced  Person.  The  upheavals  of  war  lek  millions  of  soldiers  and  civilians  far  from  home.  Millions  of  DPs  had  been  eastern  European  slave  laborers  for  the  Nazis.  The  tens  of  thousands  of  Jewish  survivors  of  Nazi  camps  either  could  not  or  did  not  want  to  return  to  their  former  homes  in  Germany  or  eastern  Europe,  and  many  lived  in  special  DP  camps  while  awai:ng  migra:on  to  America  or  Pales:ne.  Displaced  Persons  Act  of  1948:  Law  passed  by  U.S.  Congress  limi:ng  the  number  of  Jewish  displaced  persons  who  could  emigrate  to  the  United  States.  The  law  contained  an:semi:c  elements,  eventually  eliminated  in  1950.  Drancy  :  The  camp  at  Drancy  was  a  transit  camp  not  far  outside  of  Paris.  In  1939  the  camp  was  used  to  hold  refugees  from  the  fascist  regime  in  Spain.  In  1940  these  refugees  were  given  over  to  the  Nazis.  In  1941  the  French  police,  under  the  authority  of  the  Nazi  regime,  conducted  raids  throughout  France  that  imprisoned  French  Jews.  Many  vic:ms  of  these  raids  were  taken  to  Drancy.  Eichmann,  Adolph  (1906  -­‐  1962):  SS  Lieutenant  Colonel  and  head  of  the  Gestapo  department  dealing  with  Jewish  affairs.  Einsatzgruppen:  Mobile  units  of  the  Security  Police  and  SS  Security  Service  that  followed  the  German  armies  to  Poland  in  1939  and  to  the  Soviet  Union  in  June,  1941.  Their  charge  was  to  kill  all  Jews  as  well  as  communist  func:onaries,  the  handicapped,  ins:tu:onalized  psychiatric  pa:ents,  Gypsies,  and  others  considered  undesirable  by  the  nazi  state.  They  were  supported  by  units  of  the  uniformed  German  Order  Police  and  oken  used  auxiliaries  (Ukrainian,  Latvian,  Lithuanian,  and  Estonian  volunteers).  The  vic:ms  were  executed  by  mass  shoo:ngs  and  buried  in  unmarked  mass  graves;  later,  the  bodies  were  dug  up  and  burned  to  cover  evidence  of  what  had  occurred.  Eisenhower,  Dwight  D.:  As  Supreme  Commander  of  the  Allied  Expedi:onary  Forces,  General  Eisenhower  commanded  all  Allied  forces  in  Europe  beginning  in  1942.  Euthanasia:  Nazi  euphemism  for  the  deliberate  killings  of  ins:tu:onalized  physically,  mentally,  and  emo:onally  handicapped  people.  The  euthanasia  program  began  in  1939,  with  German  non-­‐Jews  as  the  first  vic:ms.  The  program  was  later  extended  to  Jews.  Fascism:  A  social  and  poli:cal  ideology  with  the  primary  guiding  principle  that  the  state  or  na:on  is  the  highest  priority,  rather  than  personal  or  individual  freedoms.  Final  Solu>on  (The  final  solu>on  to  the  Jewish  ques>on  in  Europe):  A  Nazi  euphemism  for  the  plan  to  exterminate  the  Jews  of  Europe.  Flossenburg:  Bavarian  camp  established  in  1938/39  mainly  for  poli:cal,  par:cularly  foreign,  prisoners.  Frank,  Hans:  Governor-­‐General  of  occupied  Poland  from  1939  to  1945.  A  member  of  the  Nazi  Party  from  its  earliest  days  and  Hitler's  personal  lawyer,  he  announced,  "Poland  will  be  treated  like  a  colony;  the  Poles  will  become  slaves  of  the  Greater  German  Reich."  By  1942,  more  than  85%  of  the  Jews  in  Poland  had  been  transported  to  extermina:on  camps.  Frank  was  tried  at  Nuremberg,  convicted,  and  executed  in  1946.  Führer:  Leader.  Adolf  Hitler's  :tle  in  Nazi  Germany.  Gas  chambers:  Large  chambers  in  which  people  were  executed  by  poison  gas.  These  were  built  and  used  in  Nazi  death  camps.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Generalgouvernement  (General  Government):  An  administra:ve  unit  established  by  the  Germans  on  October  26,  1939,  consis:ng  of  those  parts  of  Poland  that  had  not  been  incorporated  into  the  Third  Reich.  It  included  the  districts  of  Warsaw,  Krakow,  Radom,  Lublin,  and  Lvov.  Hans  Frank  was  appointed  Governor-­‐General.  The  Germans  destroyed  the  Polish  cultural  and  scien:fic  ins:tu:ons  and  viewed  the  Polish  popula:on  as  a  poten:al  work  force.  Genocide:  The  deliberate  and  systema:c  destruc:on  of  a  racial,  poli:cal,  cultural,  or  religious  group.  German  Workers'  Party  (Deutsche  Arbeiterpartei):  As  the  precursor  to  the  Nazi  Party,  Hitler  joined  the  right-­‐wing  Deutsche  Arbeiterpartei  (DAP)  in  1919.  The  party  espoused  na:onal  pride,  militarism,  a  commitment  to  the  Volk,  and  a  racially  "pure"  Germany.  Gestapo:  Acronym  for  Geheime  Staatspolizei  /ge  haim  e  shtahts  po  li  tsai/  ,  meaning  Secret  State  Police.  Prior  to  the  outbreak  of  war,  the  Gestapo  used  brutal  methods  to  inves:gate  and  suppress  resistance  to  Nazi  rule  within  Germany.  Aker  1939,  the  Gestapo  expanded  its  opera:ons  into  Nazi-­‐occupied  Europe.  GheJos:  The  Nazis  revived  the  medieval  term  ghebo  to  describe  their  device  of  concentra:on  and  control,  the  compulsory  "Jewish  Quarter."  Ghebos  were  usually  established  in  the  poor  sec:ons  of  a  city,  where  most  of  the  Jews  from  the  city  and  surrounding  areas  were  subsequently  forced  to  reside.  Oken  surrounded  by  barbed  wire  or  walls,  the  ghebos  were  sealed.  Established  mostly  in  eastern  Europe  (e.g.,  Lodz,  Warsaw,  Vilna,  Riga,  or  Minsk),  the  ghebos  were  characterized  by  overcrowding,  malnutri:on,  and  heavy  labor.  All  were  eventually  dissolved,  and  the  Jews  murdered.  Goebbels,  Paul  Joseph  (1897-­‐1945):  Reich  Propaganda  Director  of  the  NSDAP  and  Reich  Minister  of  Public  Enlightenment  and  Propaganda.  Goering,  Hermann  (1893-­‐1945):  Leading  Nazi  promoted  to  Reichsmarshal  in  1940.  Great  Depression:  A  deep,  worldwide,  economic  contrac:on  beginning  in  1929  which  caused  par:cular  hardship  in  Germany  which  was  already  reeling  from  huge  repara:on  payments  following  World  War  I  and  hyperinfla:on.  Guerrilla  warfare:  Figh:ng  in  which  small  independent  bands  of  soldiers  harass  an  enemy  through  surprise  raids,  abacks  on  communica:ons  and  the  like.  Gypsies:  A  collec:ve  term  for  Romani  and  Sin:.  A  nomadic  people  believed  to  have  come  originally  from  northwest  India.  They  became  divided  into  five  main  groups  s:ll  extant  today.  By  the  sixteenth  century,  they  had  spread  to  every  country  of  Europe.  Alternately  welcomed  and  persecuted  since  the  fikeenth  century,  they  were  considered  enemies  of  the  state  by  the  Nazis  and  persecuted  relentlessly.  Approximately  500,000  Gypsies  are  believed  to  have  perished  in  the  gas  chambers.  Hess,  Rudolf:  1894-­‐1987)  was  the  mentally  unstable  number  three  man  in  Hitler's  Germany.  He  is  best  known  for  a  surprise  flight  to  Scotland  in  1941.  He  was  sentenced  to  life  in  prison  at  Nuremberg.  He  died  in  jail  in  1987.  Heydrich,  Reinhard:  1894-­‐1987)  was  the  mentally  unstable  number  three  man  in  Hitler's  Germany.  He  is  best  known  for  a  surprise  flight  to  Scotland  in  1941.  He  was  sentenced  to  life  in  prison  at  Nuremberg.  He  died  in  jail  in  1987.  Himmler,  Heinrich  (1900-­‐1945):  As  head  of  the  SS  and  the  secret  police,  Himmler  had  control  over  the  vast  network  of  Nazi  concentra:on  and  extermina:on  camps,  the  Einsatzgruppen,  and  the  Gestapo.  Himmler  commibed  suicide  in  1945,  aker  his  arrest.  Von  Hindenburg,  Paul:  General  Field  Marshal  who  became  a  German  na:onal  hero  during  World  War  I  and  was  Reich  president  from  1925  to  1934.  Hitler,  Adolf  (1889-­‐1945):  Nazi  party  leader,  1919-­‐1945.  German  Chancellor,  1933-­‐1945.  Called  Führer,  or  supreme  leader,  by  the  Nazis.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Hitler  Youth  Hitler  Jugend:  was  a  Nazi  youth  auxiliary  group  established  in  1926.  It  expanded  during  the  Third  Reich.  Membership  was  compulsory  aker  1939.  Holocaust:  Derived  from  the  Greek  holokauston  which  meant  a  sacrifice  totally  burned  by  fire.  Today,  the  term  refers  to  the  systema:c  planned  extermina:on  of  about  six  million  European  Jews  and  millions  of  others  by  the  Nazis  between  1933-­‐1945.  Homophobia:  Fear  of  homosexuals.  Interna>onal  Military  Tribunal:  The  United  States,  Great  Britain,  France,  and  the  Union  of  Soviet  Socialist  Republics  charted  this  court  to  prosecute  Nazi  war  criminals.  Jehovah's  Witnesses:  Religious  sect  that  originated  in  the  United  States  and  had  about  2,  000  members  in  Germany  in  1933.  Their  religious  beliefs  did  not  allow  them  to  swear  allegiance  to  any  worldly  power  making  them  enemies  of  the  Nazi  state.  Judenrat:  Council  of  Jewish  "elders"  established  on  Nazi  orders  in  an  occupied  area.  Judaism:  The  monotheis:c  religion  of  the  Jews,  based  on  the  precepts  of  the  Old  Testament  and  the  teachings  and  commentaries  of  the  Rabbis  as  found  chiefly  in  the  Talmud.  Kapo  :  A  concentra:on  camp  inmate  appointed  by  the  SS  to  be  in  charge  of  a  work  gang.  Kippah:  The  skull  cap  worn  by  Jewish  men.  A  Kippah  is  worn  to  symbolize  that  man  exists  only  from  his  Kippah  down;  God  exists  above  the  Kippah.  Korczak,  Dr.  Janusz  (1878-­‐1942)  :  Educator,  author,  physician,  and  director  of  a  Jewish  orphanage  in  Warsaw.  Despite  the  possibility  of  personal  freedom,  he  refused  to  abandon  his  orphans  and  went  with  them  to  the  gas  chamber  in  Treblinka.  Kristallnacht:  Also  known  as  “  The  Night  of  the  Broken  Glass.”  On  this  night,  November  9,  1938,  almost  200  synagogues  were  destroyed,  over  8,000  Jewish  shops  were  sacked  and  looted,  and  tens  of  thousands  of  Jews  were  removed  to  concentra:on  camps.  This  pogrom  received  its  name  because  of  the  great  value  of  glass  that  was  smashed  during  this  an:-­‐Jewish  riot.  Riots  took  place  throughout  Germany  and  Austria  on  that  night.  League  of  German  Girls  (Bund  Deutscher  Mädel):  Female  counterpart  of  the  Hitler  Youth  formed  in  1927  but  not  formerly  integrated  by  Hitler  un:l  1932.  Lebensraum:  Meaning  "living  space,"  it  was  a  basic  principle  of  Nazi  foreign  policy.  Hitler  believed  that  eastern  Europe  had  to  be  conquered  to  create  a  vast  German  empire  for  more  physical  space,  a  greater  popula:on,  and  new  territory  to  supply  food  and  raw  materials.  Madagascar  Plan:  A  Nazi  policy  that  was  seriously  considered  during  the  late  1930s  and  1940s  which  would  have  sent  Jews  to  Madagascar,  an  island  off  the  southeast  coast  of  Africa.  At  that  :me  Madagascar  was  a  French  colony.  Ul:mately,  it  was  considered  imprac:cal  and  the  plan  was  abandoned.  Majdanek:  Nazi  camp  and  killing  center  opened  for  men  and  women  near  Lublin  in  eastern  Poland  in  late  1941.  At  first  a  labor  camp  for  Poles  and  a  POW  camp  for  Russians,  it  was  classified  as  a  concentra:on  camp  in  April  1943.  Like  Auschwitz,  it  was  also  a  major  killing  center.  Majdonek  was  liberated  by  the  Red  Army  in  July  1944,  and  a  memorial  was  opened  there  in  November  of  that  year.  Marranos  :  Jews  who  professed  to  accept  Chris:anity  in  order  to  escape  persecu:on  during  the  Spanish  Inquisi:on.  Marrano  comes  from  the  Spanish  word  "swine."  Mein  Kampf:  Meaning  "My  Struggle,"  it  was  the  ideological  base  for  the  Nazi  Party's  racist  beliefs  and  murderous  prac:ces.  Published  in  1925,  this  work  detailed  Hitler's  radical  ideas  of  German  na:onalism,  an:semi:sm,  an:-­‐Bolshevism,  and  Social  Darwinism  which  advocated  survival  of  the  fibest.  Mengele,  Joseph  (1911-­‐1979):  Senior  SS  physician  at  Auschwitz-­‐Birkenau  from  1943-­‐44.  One  of  the  physicians  who  carried  out  the  "selec:ons"  of  prisoners  upon  arrival  at  camp.  He  also  carried  out  cruel  experiments  on  prisoners.  Mitzvah:  Hebrew  word  meaning  "a  good  deed.”  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Muselmann:  German  term  meaning  "Muslim,"  widely  used  by  concentra:on  camp  prisoners  to  refer  to  inmates  who  were  on  the  verge  of  death  from  starva:on,  exhaus:on,  and  despair.  A  person  who  had  reached  the  Muselmann  stage  had  lible,  if  any,  chance  for  survival  and  usually  died  within  weeks.  The  origin  of  the  term  is  unclear.  Napolas:  Elite  schools  for  training  the  future  government  and  military  leadership  of  the  Nazi  state.  Na>onalism:  A  movement,  as  in  the  arts,  based  on  the  folk  idioms,  history,  aspira:ons,  etc.,  of  a  na:on.  Na>onal  Socialist  Women's  Associa>on:  The  NS  Frauenschak  /frou  en  shahk/    was  an  organiza:on  intended  to  recruit  an  elite  group  of  women  for  the  Nazis.  Na>onal  Socialist  Teachers'  Associa>on:  Established  in  1929,  it  assumed  responsibility  for  the  ideological  indoctrina:on  of  teachers.  The  Nazi  (Na>onal  Socialist  German  Workers')  Party:  The  Na:onalsozialis:sche  Deutsche  Arbeiterpartei  /natsional  sotsialis:she  doiche  abaita  patai/    or  NSDAP  was  founded  in  Germany  on  January  5,  1919.  It  was  characterized  by  a  centralist  and  authoritarian  structure.  Its  pla�orm  was  based  on  militaris:c,  racial,  an:semi:c  and  na:onalis:c  policies.  Nazi  Party  membership  and  poli:cal  power  grew  drama:cally  in  the  1930s,  partly  based  on  poli:cal  propaganda,  mass  rallies  and  demonstra:ons.  Neuengamme:  Concentra:on  camp  located  just  southeast  of  Hamburg  opened  in  1940.  Night  of  the  Long  Knives:  On  June  30,  1934,  Hitler  murderously  purged  the  ranks  of  the  SA.  Nuremberg  Trials:  Trials  of  twenty-­‐two  major  Nazi  figures  in  Nuremberg,  Germany  in  1945  and  1946  before  the  Interna:onal  Military  Tribunal.  Nuremberg  Laws:  The  Nuremberg  Laws  were  announced  by  Hitler  at  the  Nuremberg  Party  conference,  defining  "Jew"  and  systema:zing  and  regula:ng  discrimina:on  and  persecu:on.  The  "Reich  Ci:zenship  Law"  deprived  all  Jews  of  their  civil  rights,  and  the  "Law  for  the  Protec:on  of  German  Blood  and  German  Honor"  made  marriages  and  extra-­‐marital  sexual  rela:onships  between  Jews  and  Germans  punishable  by  imprisonment.  Opera>on  Barbarossa:  The  code  name  for  the  German  invasion  of  the  Soviet  Union  which  began  on  June  22,  1941.  Opera>on  Reinhard  (or  Ak>on  Reinhard):  The  code  name  for  the  plan  to  destroy  the  millions  of  Jews  in  the  General  Government,  within  the  framework  of  the  Final  Solu:on.  It  began  in  October,  1941,  with  the  deporta:on  of  Jews  from  ghebos  to  extermina:on  camps.  The  three  extermina:on  camps  established  under  Opera:on  Reinhard  were  Belzec,  Sobibór,  and  Treblinka.  Pale  of  SeJlement:  The  area  in  the  western  part  of  the  Russian  Empire  in  which  Russian  Jews  were  allowed  to  live  from  1835-­‐1917.  Par>sans:  Irregular  forces  which  use  guerrilla  tac:cs  when  opera:ng  in  enemy-­‐occupied  territory.  During  the  Holocaust,  par:sans  operated  secretly  in  their  efforts  to  assist  Jews  and  others  persecuted  by  the  Nazis.  Passover:  The  Jewish  holiday  that  commemorates  the  Jew's  libera:on  from  slavery  in  Egypt.  The  holiday,  which  lasts  for  eight  days,  requires  all  Jews  to  place  themselves  spiritually  in  the  shoes  of  their  ancestors  and  remember  the  era  of  bondage  in  order  to  never  allow  such  oppression  to  happen  again.  Perpetrators:  Those  who  do  something  that  is  morally  wrong  or  criminal.  Plaszow:  Concentra:on  camp  near  Kracow,  Poland  opened  in  1942.  Pogrom:  An  organized  and  oken  officially  encouraged  massacre  of  or  aback  on  Jews.  The  word  is  derived  from  two  Russian  words  that  mean  "thunder."  Porrajmos:  A  Romani  term  referring  to  the  Holocaust  that  means,  "the  devouring."  Prejudice:  A  judgment  or  opinion  formed  before  the  facts  are  known.  In  most  cases,  these  opinions  are  founded  on  suspicion,  intolerance,  and  the  irra:onal  hatred  of  other  races,  religions,  creeds,  or  na:onali:es.  Propaganda:  False  or  partly  false  informa:on  used  by  a  government  or  poli:cal  party  intended  to  sway  the  opinions  of  the  popula:on.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Protectorate:  Any  state  or  territory  protected  and  par:ally  controlled  by  a  stronger  one.  Rabbi:  Leader  of  a  Jewish  congrega:on,  similar  to  the  role  of  a  priest  or  minister.  Ravensbrück  /rah  venz  brook/  :  Concentra:on  camp  opened  for  women  in  1939.  Reich  /raikh/  :  German  word  for  empire.  Reichskammern  /raiks  ka  man/  :  Reich  government  departments.  Reichstag:  The  German  Parliament.  On  February  27,  1933,  a  staged  fire  burned  the  Reichstag  building.  A  month  later,  on  March  23,  1933,  the  Reichstag  approved  the  Enabling  Act  which  gave  Hitler  unlimited  dictatorial  power.  ReseJlement:  German  euphemism  for  the  deporta:on  of  prisoners  to  killing  centers  in  Poland.  Revisionists:  Those  who  deny  that  the  Holocaust  ever  happened.  Riefenstahl,  Leni  (b.  1902):  Nazi  film  director  chosen  personally  by  Hitler  to  make  propaganda  films  for  the  Nazi  regime,  which  include  The  Triumph  of  the  Will  (1935),  Olympia  (1938),  and  Reichsparteitag  (1935).  Righteous  Gen>les:  Non-­‐Jewish  people  who,  during  the  Holocaust,  risked  their  lives  to  save  Jewish  people  from  Nazi  persecu:on.  Today,  a  field  of  trees  planted  in  their  honor  at  the  Yad  Vashem  Holocaust  Memorial  in  Jerusalem,  Israel,  commemorates  their  courage  and  compassion.  Roosevelt,  Franklin  Delano:  Thirty-­‐second  president  of  the  U.S.,  serving  from  1933-­‐1945.  SA  (Sturmabteilung  or  Storm  Troopers)  :  Also  known  as  "Brown  Shirts,"  they  were  the  Nazi  party's  main  instrument  for  undermining  democracy  and  facilita:ng  Adolf  Hitler's  rise  to  power.  The  SA  was  the  predominant  terrorizing  arm  of  the  Nazi  party  from  1923  un:l  "The  Night  of  the  Long  Knives"  in  1934.  They  con:nued  to  exist  throughout  the  Third  Reich,  but  were  of  lesser  poli:cal  significance  aker  1934.  Sachsenhausen:  Concentra:on  camp  outside  of  Berlin  opened  in  1936.  Scapegoat:  Person  or  group  of  people  blamed  for  crimes  commibed  by  others.  SD  (Sicherheitsdienst  or  Security  Service)  :  The  SS  security  and  intelligence  service  established  in  1931  under  Reinhard  Heydrich.  Hannah  Sennesh:  A  Pales:nian  Jew  of  Hungarian  descent  who  fought  as  a  par:san  against  the  Nazis.  She  was  captured  at  the  close  of  the  war  and  assassinated  in  Budapest  by  the  Nazis.  Shoah:  The  Hebrew  word  meaning  "catastrophe,"  deno:ng  the  catastrophic  destruc:on  of  European  Jewry  during  World  War  II.  The  term  is  used  in  Israel,  and  the  Knesset  (the  Israeli  Parliament)  has  designated  an  official  day,  called  Yom  ha-­‐Shoah,  as  a  day  of  commemora:ng  the  Shoah  or  Holocaust.  Shtetl:  A  small  Jewish  town  or  village  in  eastern  Europe.  Shull:  Yiddish  word  for  synagogue,  or  Jewish  house  of  prayer.  Siddur:  The  Hebrew  name  for  the  Jewish  prayerbook.  Sobibór:  Extermina:on  camp  located  in  the  Lublin  district  of  eastern  Poland.  Sobibór  opened  in  May  1942  and  closed  the  day  aker  a  rebellion  by  its  Jewish  prisoners  on  October  14,  1943.  At  least  250,000  Jews  were  killed  there.  Social  Darwinism:  A  concept  based  on  the  idea  of  "survival  of  the  fibest."  Based  on  Social  Darwinism,  Nazis  created  a  pseudo-­‐scien:fic  brand  of  racism  which  was  most  virulent  when  directed  against  the  Jews,  but  others,  par:cularly  Slavs,  were  not  exempt.  Socialism:  A  theory  or  system  of  social  organiza:on  that  advocates  the  ownership  and  control  of  land,  capital,  industry,  etc.  by  the  community  as  a  whole.  In  Marxist  theory  it  represents  the  stage  following  capitalism  in  a  state  transforming  to  communism.  Sonderkommando  (Special  Squad)  :  SS  or  Einsatzgruppe  detachment.  The  term  also  refers  to  the  Jewish  slave  labor  units  in  extermina:on  camps  that  removed  the  bodies  of  those  gassed  for  crema:on  or  burial.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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SS  (Schutzstaffel  or  Protec>on  Squad)  :  Guard  detachments  originally  formed  in  1925  as  Hitler's  personal  guard.  From  1929,  under  Himmler,  the  SS  developed  into  the  most  powerful  affiliated  organiza:on  of  the  Nazi  party.  In  mid-­‐1934,  they  established  control  of  the  police  and  security  systems,  forming  the  basis  of  the  Nazi  police  state  and  the  major  instrument  of  racial  terror  in  the  concentra:on  camps  and  occupied  Europe.  Stalin,  Joseph:  Secretary  General  of  the  Communist  party  1922-­‐1953  and  Premier  of  the  USSR  from  1941-­‐1953  during  the  Second  World  War.  Life  under  Stalin's  brutally  oppressive  regime  was  hard  and  oken  dangerous.  Star  of  David:  A  six-­‐pointed  star  which  is  a  symbol  of  Judaism.  During  the  Holocaust,  Jews  throughout  Europe  were  required  to  wear  Stars  of  David  on  their  sleeves  or  fronts  and  backs  of  their  shirts  and  jackets.  Stereotype:  Biased  generaliza:ons  about  a  group  based  on  hearsay,  opinions,  and  distorted,  preconceived  ideas.  Streicher,  Julius:  Hitler's  friend  and  founder  of  the  an:semi:c  newspaper  Der  Stürmer.  Stroop,  Jurgen:  (1895-­‐1951)  was  the  SS  major  general  responsible  for  the  destruc:on  of  the  Warsaw  ghebo  in  1943.  Later  that  year,  as  Higher  SS  and  Police  Leader  in  Greece,  he  supervised  the  deporta:on  of  thousands  of  Jews  from  Salonika.  He  was  sentenced  to  death  and  executed  in  Poland  in1951.  Der  Stürmer:  An:semi:c  newspaper  founded  by  Hitler's  friend,  Julius  Streicher,  which  reached  a  peak  circula:on  of  500,000  in  1927.  StuJhof:  Concentra:on  camp  founded  in  1939  in  what  is  now  northern  Poland.  Sudetenland:  Formerly  Austrian  German-­‐speaking  territories  in  Bohemia  which  were  incorporated  into  Czechoslovakia  aker  World  War  I.  Swas>ka  (Hakenkreuz)  :  An  ancient  symbol  appropriated  by  the  Nazis  as  their  emblem.  Synagogue:  Jewish  house  of  worship,  similar  to  a  church.  Tallis:  Jewish  prayer  shawl  with  fringes  on  four  sides.  These  fringes  represent  the  four  corners  of  the  world  and  symbolize  God's  omnipresence.  Theresienstadt  (Terezín):  Nazi  ghebo  located  in  Czechoslovakia.  Created  in  late  1941  as  a  "model  Jewish  seblement"  to  deceive  the  outside  world,  including  Interna:onal  Red  Cross  inves:gators,  as  to  the  treatment  of  the  Jews.  However,  condi:ons  in  Terezín  were  difficult,  and  most  Jews  held  there  were  later  killed  in  death  camps.  Theresienstadt  is  the  German  name  for  the  town;  Terezín  is  the  Czech  name.  Third  Reich:  Meaning  "third  regime  or  empire,"  the  Nazi  designa:on  of  Germany  and  its  regime  from  1933-­‐45.  Historically,  the  First  Reich  was  the  medieval  Holy  Roman  Empire,  which  lasted  un:l  1806.  The  Second  Reich  included  the  German  Empire  from  1871-­‐1918.  Torah:  A  scroll  containing  the  five  books  of  Moses.  Treaty  of  Versailles:  Germany  and  the  Allies  signed  a  peace  treaty  at  the  end  of  World  War  I.  The  United  States,  Great  Britain,  France,  and  Italy  nego:ated  the  treaty  at  the  Peace  Conference  held  in  Versaille  beginning  on  January  18,  1919.  The  German  Republic  government  which  replaced  the  imperial  administra:on  was  excluded  from  the  delibera:ons.  The  treaty  created  the  Covenant  of  the  League  of  Na:ons,  outlined  Germany's  disarmament,  exacted  massive  repara:on  payments  from  Germany,  and  forced  Germany  to  cede  large  tracts  of  territory  to  various  European  na:on-­‐states.  Treblinka:  Extermina:on  camp  on  the  Bug  River  in  the  General  Government.  Opened  in  July  1942,  it  was  the  largest  of  the  three  Opera:on  Reinhard  killing  centers.  Between  700,000  and  900,000  persons  were  killed  there.  A  revolt  by  the  inmates  on  August  2,  1943,  destroyed  most  of  the  camp,  and  it  was  closed  in  November  1943.  Umschlagplatz:  Place  in  Warsaw  where  freight  trains  were  loaded  and  unloaded.  During  the  deporta:on  from  the  Warsaw  ghebo,  it  was  used  as  an  assembly  point  where  Jews  were  loaded  onto  cable  cars  to  be  taken  to  Treblinka.  It  literally  means  "transfer  point.”  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Underground:  Organized  group  ac:ng  in  secrecy  to  oppose  government,  or,  during  war,  to  resist  occupying  enemy  forces.  Volk:  The  concept  of  Volk  (people,  na:on,  or  race)  has  been  an  underlying  idea  in  German  history  since  the  early  nineteenth  century.  Inherent  in  the  name  was  a  feeling  of  superiority  of  German  culture  and  the  idea  of  a  universal  mission  for  the  German  people.  Vught:  Concentra:on  and  transit  camp  in  the  Netherlands  opened  in  January  1943.  Waffen-­‐SS:  Militarized  units  of  the  SS.  Raoul  Wallenberg:  A  Swedish  diplomat  who  deliberately  sta:oned  himself  in  Hungary  during  the  war  to  save  Hungarian  Jews  from  their  deaths.  Wannsee  Conference:  On  January  20,  1942  on  a  lake  near  Berlin  the  SS  official,  Reinhard  Heydrich,  helped  present  and  coordinate  the  Final  Solu:on.  Warsaw  gheJo:  Established  in  November  1940,  it  was  surrounded  by  wall  and  contained  nearly  500,000  Jews.  About  45,000  Jews  died  there  in  1941  alone,  as  a  result  of  overcrowding,  hard  labor,  lack  of  sanita:on,  insufficient  food,  starva:on,  and  disease.  During  1942,  most  of  the  ghebo  residents  were  deported  to  Treblinka,  leaving  about  60,000  Jews  in  the  ghebo.  A  revolt  took  place  in  April  1943  when  the  Germans,  commanded  by  General  Jürgen  Stroop,  abempted  to  raze  the  ghebo  and  deport  the  remaining  inhabitants  to  Treblinka.  The  defense  forces,  commanded  by  Mordecai  Anielewicz,  included  all  Jewish  poli:cal  par:es.  The  biber  figh:ng  lasted  twenty-­‐eight  days  and  ended  with  the  destruc:on  of  the  ghebo.  Wehrmacht:  The  combined  armed  forces  of  Germany  from  1935-­‐1945.  Weimar  Republic:  The  German  republic,  and  experiment  in  democracy  (1919-­‐1933),  was  established  aker  the  end  of  World  War  I.  Westerbork:  Transit  camp  in  the  Netherlands  Yiddish:  A  language  that  combines  elements  of  German  and  Hebrew.  Zionism:  Poli:cal  and  cultural  movement  calling  for  the  return  of  the  Jewish  people  to  their  Biblical  home.  Zyklon  B:  (Hydrogen  cyanide)  Pes:cide  used  in  some  of  the  gas  chambers  at  the  death  camps.  

Source:  hbp://fcit.usf.edu/holocaust/resource/glossary.htm    

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]  

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Online Resources

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A  Teacher’s  Guide  to  the  Holocaust  –  hbp://www.fcit.usf.edu/holocaust/:meline/:meline.htm    Includes  a  range  of  archival  video  footage:  www.fcit.usf.edu/holocaust/resource/movies1.htm    

Simon  Wiesenthal  Archiv  –  hbp://www.simon-­‐wiesenthal-­‐archiv.at/index.html    A  gfowing  archive  of  Simon  Wiesenthal’s  documents,  which  is  s:ll  in  development  due  to  Austrian  copyright  laws.  

Simon  Wiesenthal  Center  –  www.wiesenthal.com    An  interna:onal  Jewish  human  rights  organiza:on  dedicated  to  genera:ng  change  through  the  Snider  Social  Ac:on  Ins:tute  and  educa:on  by  confron:ng  an:-­‐Semi:sm,  hate  and  terrorism,  promo:ng  human  rights  and  dignity,  defending  the  safety  of  Jews  worldwide,  and  teaching  the  lessons  of  the  Holocaust  for  future  genera:ons.  

Teacher’s  Resources  –  Simon  Wiesenthal  Center  Mul:media  Learning  Center    -­‐  hbp://motlc.wiesenthal.com/site/pp.asp?c=gvKVLcMVIuG&b=394657    Resources  for  teaching  the  Holocaust  to  students  with  an  extensive  selec:on  of  videos,  photographs,  text  files,  biographies  and  ques:ons  and  answers  on  the  Second  World  War  and  the  events  of  the  Holocaust.  

United  States  Holocaust  Memorial  Museum  –    This  website  contains  guidelines  and  resources  for  teaching  about  the  Holocaust.  hbp://www.ushmm.org/educators/teaching-­‐about-­‐the-­‐holocaust/general-­‐teaching-­‐guidelines    

“Wiesenthal  Play”  Promo:onal  video  –    www.dropbox.com/s/nnxlaqbhp0ve1mm/hbp-­‐-­‐-­‐s3.amazonaws.com-­‐cineva:ve-­‐Rubicon-­‐Wiesenthal-­‐11_20-­‐Wiesenthal_SizzleEdit_v04-­‐640_360%20%283%29.mov?dl=0    

You  Tube    -­‐  www.youtube.com    A  range  of  interviews  and  documentaries  on  Simon  Wiesenthal  and  other  Holocaust  survivors  are  available  on  Youtube.com.  For  example:  “Simon  Wiesenthal”  by  Louise  Palanker  is  a  short  and  accessible  introduc:on  to  who  Wiesenthal  was.  

©  Katharine  Farmer  2014  |  Off-­‐Broadway  Across  America  |  [email protected]