World News
School board calls essay on whether Holocaust happened inappropriate
RIALTO, Calif. – The school board of a Southern California district where students were told to write an essay on whether they believe the Holocaust really happened said at a packed public meeting Wednesday night that it was a “horribly inappropriate” assignment for which the board takes “full responsibility.
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Rialto Unified School Board president Joanne Gilbert read the remarks after a brief closed session that followed a heated public meeting where Jewish groups, tolerance organizations and community leaders denounced the assignment.
The initial assignment given to eighth-graders was to do some research and write an essay explaining whether they believed the Holocaust was a real historical event or a political scheme to influence public emotion and gain. It was developed in December by a group of language arts teachers planning a unit on “The Diary of Anne Frank.”
The district had already withdrawn the assignment and called it an error, but the school board went much further in its denunciation Wednesday night, and promised broader action to prevent similar incidents, including sensitivity training for eighth-graders at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles..
“I don’t understand why a fact of history would be a matter for debate,” said Rabbi Suzanne Singer of Temple Beth El in Riverside, according to the San Bernardino Sun.
State Senator Norma Torres, who represents the area and was one of several political officials in attendance, urged the board to make a strong statement.
“Hate has no place in Rialto,” Torres said. “Hate has no place in our classrooms.
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