One out of every five young Americans believes the Holocaust is a fabrication

One out of every five young Americans believes the Holocaust is a fabrication



One‍ in five young Americans think​ the Holocaust is a myth

On December 5th, for over five hours, lawmakers grilled the ⁢presidents of elite universities in⁤ a ‌congressional hearing about ⁢antisemitism on college campuses.⁤ In one of the⁣ testiest exchanges a Republican congresswoman, Elise Stefanik, asked whether “calling for the genocide of Jews” violates university rules. It is “context-dependent”, replied Liz Magill, the president of the University of⁢ Pennsylvania. Clips of the exchange went viral​ on X, formerly Twitter. Yad Vashem, a ⁤Holocaust museum and research centre, issued a condemnation and ‌stressed⁢ the importance of “raising awareness about the history of antisemitism and the⁢ Holocaust”.

A new poll‍ from YouGov/The Economist suggests that Yad ⁢Vashem ‍has its work cut out. Young Americans—or at least the subset ‌of them who⁤ take part ‍in surveys—appear​ to be remarkably ignorant about one of modern history’s greatest crimes.‌ Some 20% of respondents aged ​18-29 think that the Holocaust is a myth, compared with⁢ 8% of those aged 30-44 (see chart). An additional 30% of young ⁣Americans said​ they do not⁣ know whether the Holocaust is a myth. Many respondents espouse the canard‍ that⁣ Jews wield too much power in America: young people are nearly five times more likely to think⁢ this than are those aged ‍65 and older (28% versus 6%).

Now for the‌ harder part: why do some young Americans embrace such views? Perhaps surprisingly, education levels do not appear to be the culprit. In our poll, the proportion of respondents who ⁤believe that the ‌Holocaust is a myth ⁣is similar across all⁤ levels of education.

2023-12-07 09:46:10
Post from www.economist.com
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