"Stronger Than Hate": USC Shoah Foundation to Offer Resources & Training to Counter Hate by 30Seconds Mom

Make a Difference
6 years ago

"Stronger Than Hate": USC Shoah Foundation to Offer Resources & Training to Counter Hate

The violent antisemitic and racist hatred seen in Charlottesville, Va., combined Nazi ideology with white supremacy and drew from the dark historical legacies of the Holocaust and slavery. This hatred revealed the fissures of a long-standing American cultural and identity crisis that requires long-term strategies to provide safe ways to explore identity and difference.

USC Shoah Foundation has announced the "Stronger Than Hate" initiative to support educators by providing them with tools and training to responsibly engage their students now and into the future. "We have to start younger and support our teachers who are often the most influential adults in our children's lives," said USC Shoah Foundation Executive Director Stephen Smith.

The "Stronger Than Hate" initiative will draw on the 55,000 testimonies of survivors and witnesses to genocide in the Institute's Visual History Archive, who provide ample warning of the link between ideological group hatred and genocidal violence. USC Shoah Foundation's research-based, evaluated educational programs developed for students, teachers and policy makers, enable them to sift through the heated rhetoric and better understand what happened in Charlottesville, what it represents more broadly, why violence born from hate continues to recur, and more importantly, how to counter acts of hatred in the future.

Smith noted that a teacher of the man accused of killing a woman in Charlottesville when he drove his car into a crowd has said that the young man showed an interest in Nazis and white supremacy, but the teacher lacked the tools to be able to deal with his student's fascination with evil. "'Stronger Than Hate' will provide such tools and direct support, giving educators safe and effective pathways to engage all the many diverse groups we see in classrooms today in respectful dialogue and learning," Smith said.

"Stronger Than Hate" takes its name from Roman Kent, a Holocaust survivor and USC Shoah Foundation board member, whose life experience taught him the power of those words. "To remember is not enough," Kent said. "We must all teach our children tolerance and understanding, both at home and at school. We all must make it clear that hate is never right and love is never wrong."

For more information, visit SFI.usc.edu.

Photo: USC Shoah Foundation

start discussion

Please login to comment.

recommended tips

Bye, Felicia: 4 Things You Need to Give Up This New Year to Live a Better Life

Traditional Sweet Italian Easter Bread Recipe With Colored Eggs

Sweet Bunny Bread Recipe: A Fun Easter Craft That You Can Eat

“Become the Fire” Book Signing at The Book Stall: Building Community Has Never Been So Much Fun