Become a Member
Opinion

Despite concerns, Westminster is the best place for the new national Holocaust Memorial

Communities Secretary writes that the monument's proximity to Parliament will 'remind us all of the role of democracy in standing up whenever our shared values are threatened'

December 24, 2018 12:56
James Brokenshire has said the 'most successful Holocaust memorial projects and exhibitions contextualise this dark period in our history in the personal stories of just a few individuals'
2 min read

Twenty years ago in Whitwell Middle School, Tennessee, students found it hard to comprehend that six million Jewish men, women and children were murdered during the Holocaust.

The teachers explained Jewish people were forced to wear yellow stars, and many citizens wore paper clips on their clothing as an act of solidarity.

This sparked the idea for the students to collect paper clips of their own – six million of them to express their remembrance of Jewish families lost and the communities torn apart in the Holocaust.

It was slow at first, students digging through drawers at home, but by the end of the school year the class had 700,000 paper clips. In just a couple of years, they had gathered enough paper clips to honour not only the Jewish victims of the Holocaust but to mark all victims of Nazi persecution.