Insightful docu about the U.S., immigration & democracy.
Parents Need to Know
Why Age 15+?
Any Positive Content?
Violence & Scariness
some
Archive documents, photographs, and footage of Jewish persecution in Europe, ranging from people forced to live in ghettos to images from concentration camps. Interviews with survivors offer horrific details about these events. Conversations about racist and bigoted attitudes and behaviors in the United States. All is offered in a historical and educational context.
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Offers an in-depth analysis of the complicated social, political, and economic conditions in the United States that informed the U.S. government's refugee and immigration policy while the Nazis were in power. Also highlights how this legacy continues to inform said policy today.
Positive Role Models
a little
Stories of American and other government workers who did what they could to help Jewish refugees despite U.S. policy. Notes that despite the restrictions, the United States was responsible for rescuing the highest number of Jewish refugees compared to other countries while Hitler was in power.
Positive Messages
very little
While not an indictment of the U.S., it does point out that the country could have done more to rescue European Jews, as well as many of the complex reasons why it didn't. Racism, antisemitism, xenophobia, eugenics, nationalism, and populism are discussed. All of this invites people to think about how to avoid these mistakes in the future.
Diverse Representations
very little
Experts and historians featured are male and female, White and Black. Historical images of American and European leaders, Jewish refugees, Black Americans, and others. Addresses the different communities of refugees that have historically entered the U.S., and how attitudes toward them have evolved (or not) over time.
Parents need to know that the docuseries TheU.S. and the Holocaust examines what influenced the U.S. stance on Jewish immigration before and during the Holocaust, and how it still informs American refugee and immigration policy today. It features disturbing archive footage of the systematic persecution and murder of Jews in Europe before and during World War II. Democracy, extreme nationalism, eugenics, racism, bigotry, and xenophobia in the United States are also discussed in detail. Smoking is sometimes visible too. All of this is offered in an educational context, but it may be overwhelming for young or sensitive viewers.
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What's the Story?
Co-directed by Ken Burns, THE U.S. AND THE HOLOCAUST is a three-part documentary series about the United States' response to what is now known as the Holocaust, and how it reflects the ongoing challenges to America's democratic ideals. Archive footage, interviews with historians, and dramatic readings contribute to the examination of the social, political, and economic reasons that kept the U.S. government from issuing visas to Jewish refugees from Europe who were attempting to escape systematic and horrific persecution by the Nazis. In doing so, it underscores how America's overall attitudes about specific racial, ethnic, and religious communities from other countries, and U.S. refugee and immigration policymaking, were -- and continue to be -- at odds with the longstanding canon that the United States is a land of immigrants.
The informative, difficult, heartbreaking series illuminates how and why the United States didn't offer more support for European Jews during their persecution by the Nazis prior to, and during, World War II. Like most media about the Holocaust, it offers some insights into the wave of nationalism that facilitated Hitler's rise to power, and the Nazis' methodical slaughter of six million Jewish men, women, and children. But the main focus of this work is on detailing what the United States did and didn't do to help them, the reasons for which are contextualized within its history of systematic racism, antisemitism, and xenophobia. It also underscores how this legacy continues to inform contemporary U.S. refugee and immigration policymaking, despite the United States' continuing to celebrate open immigration as a principle on which American democracy is built. What's presented here is uncomfortable to come to terms with, but The U.S. and the Holocaust raises important questions that should compel us to think critically about what we value as pillars of American democracy, and why we're not living up to those values as a nation.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about the lessons we can learn from the Holocaust. What are some of the things that we should do to prevent something like it from happening again anywhere in the world? How has media been used to assist with this mission?
What does The U.S. and the Holocaust teach us about systematic racism and bigotry? How do these conversations relate to contemporary issues and events in the United States, such as Black Lives Matter, the 2017 Muslim travel ban, anti-Asian attitudes during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the January 6 U.S. Capitol attack?
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