The Fort Worth Press - Holocaust remembrance and Gaza collide in Brussels schools

USD -
AED 3.6725
AFN 63.503502
ALL 81.990336
AMD 370.903715
ANG 1.789884
AOA 918.000197
ARS 1401.993023
AUD 1.39913
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.696504
BAM 1.67146
BBD 2.014355
BDT 122.739548
BGN 1.668102
BHD 0.377403
BIF 2975
BMD 1
BND 1.275858
BOB 6.936925
BRL 4.965705
BSD 1.000128
BTN 95.070143
BWP 13.576443
BYN 2.828953
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011854
CAD 1.36214
CDF 2315.999417
CHF 0.784106
CLF 0.023178
CLP 912.21986
CNY 6.83025
CNH 6.83533
COP 3728.45
CRC 454.739685
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.650328
CZK 20.87905
DJF 177.720468
DKK 6.39432
DOP 59.600085
DZD 132.411933
EGP 53.530803
ERN 15
ETB 157.075029
EUR 0.8557
FJD 2.202202
FKP 0.736222
GBP 0.739275
GEL 2.685011
GGP 0.736222
GHS 11.195005
GIP 0.736222
GMD 73.49532
GNF 8777.497369
GTQ 7.643867
GYD 209.252937
HKD 7.83558
HNL 26.629448
HRK 6.447202
HTG 130.892468
HUF 312.100503
IDR 17433
ILS 2.95367
IMP 0.736222
INR 95.350202
IQD 1310
IRR 1314999.999816
ISK 122.709857
JEP 0.736222
JMD 157.565709
JOD 0.709029
JPY 157.276498
KES 129.191543
KGS 87.420503
KHR 4011.999844
KMF 420.502192
KPW 899.999998
KRW 1475.990178
KWD 0.30811
KYD 0.833593
KZT 463.980036
LAK 21962.493505
LBP 89401.229103
LKR 319.60688
LRD 183.624998
LSL 16.83005
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.334982
MAD 9.246963
MDL 17.22053
MGA 4154.999745
MKD 52.771476
MMK 2099.74975
MNT 3576.675528
MOP 8.070745
MRU 39.949922
MUR 46.950046
MVR 15.454942
MWK 1741.501824
MXN 17.509742
MYR 3.964503
MZN 63.909913
NAD 16.830069
NGN 1370.929942
NIO 36.719711
NOK 9.27435
NPR 152.110449
NZD 1.702285
OMR 0.384497
PAB 1.000329
PEN 3.505986
PGK 4.332503
PHP 61.7085
PKR 278.749656
PLN 3.64193
PYG 6218.192229
QAR 3.642973
RON 4.441799
RSD 100.477983
RUB 75.00169
RWF 1460.5
SAR 3.752195
SBD 8.025868
SCR 13.35873
SDG 600.507781
SEK 9.299335
SGD 1.277245
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.649962
SLL 20969.496166
SOS 571.499363
SRD 37.455993
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.15
SVC 8.752948
SYP 110.524984
SZL 16.82975
THB 32.770189
TJS 9.363182
TMT 3.505
TND 2.885502
TOP 2.40776
TRY 45.21975
TTD 6.794204
TWD 31.6445
TZS 2609.999854
UAH 44.075497
UGX 3753.577989
UYU 40.286638
UZS 11997.999952
VES 488.94275
VND 26323
VUV 118.778782
WST 2.715188
XAF 560.591908
XAG 0.013699
XAU 0.00022
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.8029
XDR 0.69563
XOF 558.501381
XPF 102.375041
YER 238.625019
ZAR 16.80115
ZMK 9001.200271
ZMW 18.731492
ZWL 321.999592
  • NGG

    -0.9800

    87.5

    -1.12%

  • RIO

    -1.9500

    98.63

    -1.98%

  • AZN

    -1.2800

    183.46

    -0.7%

  • BTI

    -0.3600

    58.35

    -0.62%

  • GSK

    -0.7100

    50.9

    -1.39%

  • RBGPF

    1.6000

    64.7

    +2.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    16.33

    -0.12%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    36.36

    +0.03%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • BP

    0.5300

    46.94

    +1.13%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    23.93

    -0.13%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    -3.8000

    74.33

    -5.11%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.93

    -0.39%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    16.05

    -0.62%

Holocaust remembrance and Gaza collide in Brussels schools
Holocaust remembrance and Gaza collide in Brussels schools / Photo: © BELGA/AFP

Holocaust remembrance and Gaza collide in Brussels schools

A few months ago in Brussels, Arthur Langerman was telling high school pupils about losing family members in the Holocaust and escaping a Nazi raid himself, when he was cut short by two Muslim teens wanting to talk about Gaza.

Text size:

"It's a genocide, and it's been happening for 75 years," interjected one of the young women, triggering a heated back-and-forth about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

For their history teacher, Olivier Blairon, the scene sums up how hard it is to teach the genocide of six million Jews during World War II since the Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023 triggered Israel's onslaught on the Gaza Strip.

Blairon works in a large high school in the Brussels district of Koekelberg, home to a large community of Moroccan descent, where he said many students "identify with the violence suffered by Gazans".

"I have heard anti-Semitic remarks," Blairon said. "Some of my students mix things up" by equating all Jews with Israel, he said. Some are also deliberately "provocative".

"So I take the time to unpick their preconceptions," he said.

Blairon's students made up the lion's share of youths present at the encounter with the 82-year-old Langerman, which AFP attended at the Belgian capital's secular Jewish community centre, the CCLJ.

"The October 7 attacks highlighted how hard it has become to talk about the Holocaust," said the centre's co-director, Nicolas Zomersztajn.

"It's more complicated in the current context," said Zomersztajn, who laments how the Jewish community is constantly being asked to take a stance on the war in Gaza.

At the Brussels Jewish Museum, where four people were killed in a jihadist attack in 2014, a handful of school outings were cancelled in the immediate aftermath of October 7.

Some students report sick on the day of a visit or find a way to avoid going on to see a nearby synagogue, said Frieda Van Camp, who works in the museum's education department.

- Hate messages -

Anti-Semitism has been surging worldwide on a scale unseen in recent memory since the war in Gaza was sparked by the Hamas attack that killed 1,218 people in Israel. Since then more than 50,800 people, mostly civilians, have died in the Palestinian territory.

The Belgian anti-discrimination body Unia recorded 91 anti-Semitic incidents between October 7 and December 7, 2023 -- compared to 57 for the whole of the previous year.

Most involved online hate messages directed at the Jewish community, which numbers around 30,000.

A May 2024 poll found that around one in seven Belgians felt "antipathy" towards Jews.

Anti-Semitic prejudice was disproportionate among people on the far left, far right and in Muslim communities, the poll of 1,000 adults found.

When it comes to talking about Jews and the Holocaust in Brussels schools, "you can feel people tense up", said Ina Van Looy, who is in charge of a project combating discrimination at the CCLJ.

"For some teachers it has become difficult to take their students to any kind of Jewish site," she said.

"Some teachers are completely overwhelmed by the way students get their information and how they talk about the conflict" between Israel and the Palestinians, she said. "Many of them feel helpless."

During the talk with Langerman, it was Van Looy who stepped in to calm things down after the discussion turned to Gaza.

Afterwards, it was agreed that she would visit the Koekelberg school to talk about the notion of genocide.

"These young people are hurt, they are angry. We have to listen to them," she told AFP.

- Not being 'silenced' -

In Belgium, all students are formally taught about the Nazi's systematic slaughter of Europe's Jews by the end of high school.

Schools organise trips from primary upwards to Holocaust memorial sites, such as Fort Breendonk near Antwerp or the Kazerne Dossin transit camp in Mechelen, where the country's Jews were rounded up for deportation.

And pupils in Brussels regularly take part in inaugurating new "stolpersteine" or "stumbling stones" on the city's sidewalks, in memory of Jews murdered in the Nazi death camps.

Between 1942 and 1944, some 25,000 Jews were deported from Belgium to the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp in German-occupied Poland. Fewer than 2,000 survived.

But in the past few months, two primary school headteachers from Anderlecht, another Brussels district with a large Muslim population, decided their students would not take part in unveiling new stones.

They thought "it was not fair to impose that on students and parents" at the height of the Gaza conflict, said Bella Swiatlowski, of the Belgian association for the memory of the Holocaust.

Neither headteacher wanted to discuss the issue when contacted by AFP.

Finally the mayor of Anderlecht stepped in and found a way for the two schools to be represented at the inauguration ceremony in January.

That same month, dozens of primary and secondary schoolchildren took part in another "stumbling stone" inauguration marking 80 years since the liberation of Auschwitz, laying a white rose on the ground in a solemn and moving ceremony.

Faouzia Hariche, the Algerian-born deputy mayor of Brussels in charge of public education, paid tribute to the "courage" of teachers who refuse to "be silenced" on teaching the Holocaust.

"A small minority of teachers are fearful of tackling the subject," she said. "We need to give them the tools to do so."

F.Garcia--TFWP