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USHMM.org > History > Online Exhibitions > Antisemitism > Voices on Antisemitism > Transcript
Voices on Antisemitism: A Podcast Series

Sara Bloomfield
March 1, 2007
Sara Bloomfield
Director, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Long before she joined the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Sara Bloomfield taught students about the Holocaust. Here, Bloomfield explains why remembering this history matters.
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TRANSCRIPT:
 
SARA BLOOMFIELD:
I think leaving America and leaving the security of my home and family and community helped me understand better what it meant to be an American, what it meant to be a Jew. I mean, I'm a big believer in leaving your comfort zone and leaving your country and going out and seeing the world, and I think that's how you learn who you are, who you can be, who you must be in the world.

DANIEL GREENE:
Long before she joined the staff of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Sara Bloomfield taught students about the dangers of intolerance. Today, as director of the Museum, Bloomfield continues to educate about Holocaust history and the threat of hatred and genocide today.

Welcome to Voices on Antisemitism, a free podcast series of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. I'm Daniel Greene. Every other week, we invite a guest to reflect about the many ways that antisemitism and hatred influence our world today. Here's Holocaust Memorial Museum Director, Sara Bloomfield.

SARA BLOOMFIELD:
When I lived in Australia, I was trained to teach English literature to high school students. And I was rummaging around the textbook room one day, and I found a copy of Elie Wiesel's Night. And I thought, wow, this would be great, I could teach a unit on prejudice and hate. And I had seventh graders, the—I had actually the number one class—very smart kids. And, I indeed read it in, I think, the course of one period.

And at the end of the class my very best student came up to me and said, "I noticed that when you read that there was something emotional, in your voice."

And I said, "Well that's because I'm Jewish."

And she was horrified. And she put her hand up to her mouth in utter shock, and then she said, "Don't worry, I won't tell anyone your secret."

And I said, "It's not a secret. It's who I am, and it's—I'm proud of it."

And she said, "No, no, you can never tell anyone in this school that you're Jewish. They will hate you for it."

So I went home that night, and I thought about this, and I thought that this had to be a learning experience for my kids. So we made a list of, as the class the next day, of all the things that one could ever be prejudiced against in the world. Then we went through and said, "Who in this room has these feelings, and who in this room is of that group?" So when it got to, "Who is a Jew?" I raised my hand. And the entire class erupted into pandemonium.

I think for some students they never quite got over it. I mean, they had a lot of questions about, you know, what is a Jew? They had heard really horrible stories. I mean, one kid actually said to me, "But you look like us." It was if a Jew was an exotic creature, from outer space.

So, maybe at that pivotal moment I was destined to become involved with the Holocaust.

Teaching people about the Holocaust explains that antisemitism is a very dangerous problem, and that not only can it be carried to ultimate consequences, but it was—in recent history. Technological progress seems to be fairly inevitable, but that does not mean moral progress is. The Nazis were a very advanced, educated—we could call them a progressive—society. In fact, they would have almost defined their social engineering as a sign of their progress. And, I think one of the lessons that as we move into this very interconnected, globalized twenty-first century, that we are learning is the power of hate. I mean, hatred can spread as quickly, you know, as an Internet virus. So I do think that this psychological need for hatred is something we better be facing up to about our species, and if we don't we will do so at our own peril.

I think our Museum presents the Holocaust in a way that challenges people to confront human nature—the entire spectrum, from extraordinary evil that led to the mass murder of Jews to the extraordinary goodness of people who risked their lives, risked the lives of their families to save another human being, and every kind of shade of human behavior in between. And, for me, it says to people, now that you know this about ourselves as a species, what must you do with this? You must do something with this. You must be responsible for our species.

DANIEL GREENE:
Voices on Antisemitism is a free podcast series of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Join us every other week to hear a new perspective on the continuing threat of antisemitism in our world today. To contribute your thoughts to our series, please call 888-70USHMM, or visit our Web site at www.ushmm.org. At that site, you can also listen to Voices on Genocide Prevention, a podcast series on contemporary genocide.


AVAILABLE INTERVIEWS:
Harald Edinger
Beverly E. Mitchell
Martin Goldsmith
Tad Stahnke
Antony Polonsky
Johanna Neumann
Albie Sachs
Rabbi Capers Funnye, Jr.
Bruce Pearl
Jeffrey Goldberg
Ian Buruma
Miriam Greenspan
Matthias Küntzel
Laurel Leff
Hillel Fradkin
Irwin Cotler
Kathrin Meyer
Ilan Stavans
Susan Warsinger
Margaret Lambert
Alexandra Zapruder
Michael Chabon
Alain Finkielkraut
Dan Bar-On
James Carroll
Ruth Gruber
Reza Aslan
Alan Dershowitz
Michael Posner
Susannah Heschel
Father Patrick Desbois
Rabbi Marc Schneier and Russell Simmons
Shawn Green
Judea Pearl
Daniel Libeskind
Faiza Abdul-Wahab
Errol Morris
Charles Small
Cornel West
Karen Armstrong
Mark Potok
Ladan Boroumand
Elie Wiesel
Eboo Patel
Jean Bethke Elshtain
Madeleine K. Albright
Bassam Tibi
Deborah Lipstadt
Sara Bloomfield
Lawrence Summers
Christopher Caldwell
Father John Pawlikowski
Ayaan Hirsi Ali
Christopher Browning
Gerda Weissmann Klein
Robert Satloff
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg


  • Credits
  • Copyright
  • RELATED LINKS
  • Antisemitism
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • History of Antisemitism
    (Library bibliography)
  • Antisemitism: Protocols of the Elders of Zion
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Nazi Propaganda
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Racism
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Anti-Jewish Legislation in Prewar Germany
    (Holocaust Encyclopedia article)
  • Christian Persecution of Jews over the Centuries
    (Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, Committee on Church Relations and the Holocaust)
  • Antisemitism: Special Two-Part Presentation
    (Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, Scholarly Presentation, December 18, 2003)
  • "Past Revisited? Historical Reflections on Contemporary Antisemitism"
    (Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, January 2003 Shapiro lecture by Steven Zipperstein)