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Resistance Movement During the Holocaust


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Keywords: Podcast, Holocaust, resistance
Subject(s): Technology, Podcasting, Social Studies, History
Grades 9 through 10
School: East Knox High School, Howard, OH
Planned By: Elizabeth Pozderac
Original Author: Elizabeth Pozderac, Howard
Resistance Movement During the Holocaust

Summary:
Students will work in small groups to create a podcast covering one of many examples of resistance that occurred during the Holocaust. Students will work on the computers for 2 days to collect information, and have 2 days to create a podcast on the Apple Laptops. Completed podcasts will be emailed to the teacher.

Standard:
Skills and Methods - Benchmark B
Develop and present a research project including:
Collection of data;
Narrowing and refining the topic;
Construction and support of the thesis

Objectives:
Students will
Research a topic
Work Cooperatively
Summarize the key events of their particular uprising
Develop a podcast that details their resistance

Time frame:
2 - 43 minute classes in the computer lab
2 - 43 minutes days with the Apple computers to create the podcast

Procedures:
Day One
Explain and demonstrate the project
Form groups and choose topic
Sign agreement

Days Two and Three
Research and collect data
Save information - email to self, or put on flash drive

Days Four and Five
Create podcast using Garage Band
Export podcast - email to teacher

Sources:
1. http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005213 - a very good place to start
2. http://schoolsyte.com/mac-podcasting/ - a great site to learn how to podcast

Armed Ghetto Resistance - United States Holocasut Museum
1. Tuchin Ghetto: On September 3, 1942, seven hundred Jewish families escaped from this ghetto in the Ukraine. They were hunted down, and only 15 survived.
2. Warsaw Ghetto: By 1943, the ghetto residents had organized an army of about 1,000 fighters, mostly unarmed and without equipment. They were joined by thousands of others, mostly the young and able-bodied, still needed for forced labor. By that time, the half-million original inhabitants had been depleted to about 60,000 as a result of starvation, disease, cold, and deportation.
In January 1943, the S.S. entered the ghetto to round up more Jews for shipment to the death camps. They were met by a volley of bombs, Molotov cocktails, and the bullets from a few firearms which had been smuggled into the ghettos. Twenty S.S. soldiers were killed. The action encouraged a few members of the Polish resistance to support the uprising, and a few machine guns, some hand grenades, and about a hundred rifles and revolvers were smuggled in.
Facing them were almost 3,000 crack German troops with 7,000 reinforcements available. Tanks and heavy artillery surrounded the ghetto. General Heinrich Himmler promised Adolf Hitler that the uprising would be quelled in three days, and the ghetto would be destroyed. It took four weeks. The ghetto was reduced to rubble following bomber attacks, gas attacks, and burning of every structure by the Nazis. Fifteen thousand Jews died in the battle, and most of the survivors were shipped to the death camps. Scores of German soldiers were killed. Some historical accounts report that 300 Germans were killed and 1,000 wounded, although the actual figure is unknown.
3. Bialystok Ghetto: Jewish paramilitary organizations formed within the ghetto attacked the German army when it was determined that the Nazis intended to liquidate it. The battle lasted just one day, until the resisters were killed or captured.
4. Vilna Ghetto: Some inhabitants of the Vilna Ghetto began an uprising against their Nazi captors on September 1, 1943. Most participants were killed, although a few escaped successfully and joined partisan units.
Armed Resistance in the Death Camps
1. Treblinka: Seven hundred Jews were successful in blowing up the camp on August 2, 1943. All but 150-200 Jews perished, as well as over 20 Germans. Only 12 survived the war.
2. Sobibor: Jewish and Russian prisoners mounted an escape attempt on October 14, 1943. About 60 of 600 prisoners involved in the escape survived to join Soviet partisans. Ten S.S. guards were killed and one wounded.
3. Auschwitz: On October 7, 1944, one of the four crematoria at Auschwitz was blown up by Sonderkommandos. These were workers, mostly Jews, whose job it was to clear away the bodies of gas chamber victims. The workers were all caught and killed

Comments
This lesson allows students to be engaged while meeting state standards for research and technology.
Follow-Up
Students share their podcasts and evaluate each others.
Materials: Mobile Labs, Digital Voice Recorders, Hard Drives, Podcasting