News

One in 5 young Americans deny the Holocaust. Exhibit with 700 artifacts aims to change that.

In a glass case at “Auschwitz. Not Long Ago. Not Far Away.” lie many items people carry in their purses and totes: hairbrushes, razors, glasses, loose buttons, perfume bottles. They make it easy to see the people behind the statistics.  

Amid the rise in antisemitism that has sprung up since the Oct. 7 attack in Israel, organizers of the exhibit aim, among other things, to address those 1 in 5 young Americans who deny the Holocaust. On a bench in a dimly lit gallery by his mother’s yellow star, Robert Jan van Pelt, the chief curator and a professor, makes his case for relying on evidence. 

Why We Wrote This

Amid the Israel-Hamas war, antisemitism and Holocaust denial have risen. An Auschwitz exhibit stands firmly for the truth by providing evidence of atrocities – and humanity.

“We basically tell our students, ‘You may have your own opinions, but you can’t have your own facts,’” says Dr. van Pelt. “We leave something to [visitors] to draw their own conclusions and narratives.”

The exhibit, currently in Boston, features some 700 artifacts from the Nazis’ largest concentration camp. On a recent visit, Nancy Harrowitz, director of Boston University’s Elie Wiesel Center for Jewish Studies, says there was a “somber hush in the air.”

“I do think that exhibits like this fight against Holocaust denial in an active and vivid way by presenting physical proof and testimonies,” she says.

In a crowded 1996 British courtroom, Robert Jan van Pelt was called on as a witness in a lawsuit to confirm this fact: Jews were systematically murdered at Auschwitz, over 1 million of them. 

Historian Deborah Lipstadt had been sued for calling British academic David Irving a Holocaust denier in one of her books. So Mr. Irving sued for libel, doubling down on his denial. As a result of the testimony of Dr. van Pelt and others, Dr. Lipstadt prevailed – providing solid proof of Nazi war crimes at Auschwitz.

Decades later, Dr. van Pelt has a new task ahead of him: providing evidence of the Jewish genocide’s worst site in a traveling exhibit. 

Why We Wrote This

Amid the Israel-Hamas war, antisemitism and Holocaust denial have risen. An Auschwitz exhibit stands firmly for the truth by providing evidence of atrocities – and humanity.

Amid the rise in antisemitism that has sprung up since the Oct. 7 attack in Israel, he aims, among other things, to address those 1 in 5 young Americans who deny the Holocaust. Jews in academic settings increasingly feel sidelined in discussions of their history. In Greater Boston, for example, two separate advocacy groups led by students are suing Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for failing to protect Jewish students from harassment both inside and outside the classroom.

Dr. van Pelt, the chief curator of “Auschwitz. Not Long Ago. Not Far Away.” and a professor in Canada at the University of Waterloo, spoke with the Monitor at the exhibition’s latest stop in Boston. On a bench in a dimly lit gallery by his mother’s yellow star, her Dutch state ID branding her a Jew, and the fake ID she used to flee, he made his case for relying on evidence.

“We basically tell our students, ‘You may have your own opinions, but you can’t have your own facts,’” says Dr. van Pelt before turning his gaze toward the striped pajamas, the yellow star, and a giant barrack lifted from Auschwitz. “We leave something to [visitors] to draw their own conclusions and narratives.”

Courtesy of Immerse Agency

Visitors take in a table with a teacup and book from a Nazi captain’s office.

The exhibit features some 700 artifacts from the Nazis’ largest concentration camp. Curators say they have tried to present material in a way that accommodates visitors of all ages and backgrounds. The Liberty Mutual Foundation has paid for 10,000 schoolchildren in the area to visit the exhibition, housed at The Saunders Castle at Park Plaza through the summer.

Previous ArticleNext Article