Nearly two-thirds of US young adults unaware 6m
Jews killed in the Holocaust
According to survey of adults 18-39, 23% said they
believed the Holocaust was a myth, had been exaggerated or they weren’t sure
Harriet
Sherwood
@harrietsherwood
Wed 16 Sep
2020 05.01 BSTLast modified on Wed 16 Sep 2020 08.32 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/16/holocaust-us-adults-study
Almost
two-thirds of young American adults do not know that 6 million Jews were killed
during the Holocaust, and more than one in 10 believe Jews caused the
Holocaust, a new survey has found, revealing shocking levels of ignorance about
the greatest crime of the 20th century.
According
to the study of millennial and Gen Z adults aged between 18 and 39, almost half
(48%) could not name a single concentration camp or ghetto established during
the second world war.
Almost a
quarter of respondents (23%) said they believed the Holocaust was a myth, or
had been exaggerated, or they weren’t sure. One in eight (12%) said they had
definitely not heard, or didn’t think they had heard, about the Holocaust.
More than
half (56%) said they had seen Nazi symbols on their social media platforms
and/or in their communities, and almost half (49%) had seen Holocaust denial or
distortion posts on social media or elsewhere online.
“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, president of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against
Germany (Claims Conference) which commissioned the survey.
Taylor added: “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.”
The survey,
the first to drill down to state level in the US, ranks states according to a
score based on three criteria: whether young people have definitely heard about
the Holocaust; whether they can name one concentration camp, death camp or
ghetto; and whether they know 6 million Jews were killed.
The
top-scoring state was Wisconsin, where 42% of millennial and Gen Z adults met
all three criteria, followed by Minnesota at 37% and Massachusetts at 35%. The
lowest-scoring states were Florida at 20%, Mississippi at 18% and Arkansas at
17%.
Nationally,
63% of respondents did not know 6 million Jews were murdered during the
Holocaust, and more than one in three (36%) thought 2 million or fewer had been
killed.
Eleven per
cent of respondents across the US believed that Jews had caused the Holocaust,
with the proportion in New York state at 19%, followed by 16% in Louisiana,
Tennessee and Montana, and 15% in Arizona, Connecticut, Georgia, Nevada and New
Mexico.
Nationally,
44% of those questioned were able to identify Auschwitz-Birkenau, and only 3%
were familiar with Bergen-Belsen. Six out of 10 respondents in Texas could not
name a single concentration camp or ghetto.
However, almost two-thirds (64%) of American
millennial and Gen Z adults believe Holocaust education should be compulsory in
schools. Seven out of 10 said it was not acceptable for an individual to hold
neo-Nazi views.
The Claims
Conference, whose mission is “to provide a measure of justice for Jewish
Holocaust victims”, set up a taskforce to oversee the survey. It included
Holocaust survivors, historians and experts from Yad Vashem and the United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Data was
collected from 1,000 interviews nationwide and 200 interviews in each state
with young adults aged 18 to 39 selected at random.

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