Lighting Candles in the Darkness: An Exploration of Commemorative Acts with British Teenagers at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Context
- the nature of Religious Education and Collective Worship in UK schools (Section 2.1)
- the structure and aims of Lessons from Auschwitz projects (Section 2.2)
2.1. Religious Education and Acts of Collective Worship in UK Schools
2.2. The Lessons from Auschwitz Project
3. Research Aims
4. Methodology
5. Research Findings
- The context of the memorial ceremony had been a significant factor in participants’ recollections.
- The content of the memorial ceremony had resonated with participants in a number of ways.
- Their emotional engagement with the memorial ceremony was a significant aspect of participants’ recollections (although this theme was far more evident amongst the students than the educators).
5.1. Context
‘helps to even more take away the idea of it being a museum, it being just educational… it helped to really make me think about it, just to stand there and be with lots of people who are all in the same boat as me, who are there not knowing what to think, and feeling like they knew everything, yet they didn’t’.
5.2. Content
5.3. Emotional Engagement
‘I think I became quite a bit more of a dark person afterwards… I wasn’t as wishy-washy as I was before… it helped to really make me understand the potential horrors that could occur in the future… when I see what’s going on with even something like Brexit, it [Brexit] really stresses me out… this idea of discrimination… really upsets me. Whenever I wake up, I always make sure I check the news to see has it got worse, and it is getting worse…’
‘it is a vitally important part of the experience. Much of what we do when we guide is to engage the participants with the site in an academic way. This is important of course but sometimes I think the students would like the chance to reflect privately on what they are seeing and “feel” the experience more. The ceremony at the end is one way to achieve this’.
6. Discussion
- The provision of reflective spaces—when students encounter emotionally demanding content such as the Holocaust, educators should provide them with formal and informal spaces that enable them to pause, reflect, and begin to find the potential for ongoing ‘creative’ learning from their encounter with the text.
- Providing a clear structure for reflective spaces—such creative learning may not happen instinctively. When these spaces are facilitated, educators should provide a clear structure for their students so that they understand the ‘purpose’ of the space—to reflect on their learning so far, and/or towards their future thinking and actions. It is important that students are not left to ‘flounder’ with this new, potentially ‘destructive’ knowledge (Clements 2006, p. 46). Structured reflective spaces should support students in beginning a process of emotional organization as a means of moving forwards with this new knowledge within their developing world view as a young adult.
- The reflective space should be familiar to some extent. In this study the students were accustomed to acts of collective worship, and this ceremony broadly follows that format, enabling familiarity. It might be challenging for students to reflect in unfamiliar surroundings (thus potentially compounding any disconnection with the subject matter and hindering creative learning).
- Similarly, the content of the reflective space should be carefully considered—in this study some of the content was unfamiliar to most for the students (such as the inclusion of Hebrew prayers). While the data suggest that this unfamiliar content appeared to enhance most students’ connection with the reflective space, there is the potential for the opposite to occur.
- Finally, it is particularly important in religious or semi-religious contexts to ensure that participation is optional (as is the case at LfA ceremonies), to avoid students rejecting what they might perceive as an imposed (religious) framework for their learning.
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Richardson, A. Lighting Candles in the Darkness: An Exploration of Commemorative Acts with British Teenagers at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Religions 2021, 12, 29. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010029
Richardson A. Lighting Candles in the Darkness: An Exploration of Commemorative Acts with British Teenagers at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Religions. 2021; 12(1):29. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010029
Chicago/Turabian StyleRichardson, Alasdair. 2021. "Lighting Candles in the Darkness: An Exploration of Commemorative Acts with British Teenagers at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum" Religions 12, no. 1: 29. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010029
APA StyleRichardson, A. (2021). Lighting Candles in the Darkness: An Exploration of Commemorative Acts with British Teenagers at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Religions, 12(1), 29. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010029