2004
DOI: 10.1080/0013191032000152246
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A journey to the holocaust: modes of understanding among Israeli adolescents who visited Poland

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Cited by 12 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Items of the National Resilience scale were taken from a number of studies: The Center for National Security at Haifa University (Ben‐Dor et al, ); a study on the individual and public resilience in the town of Kiriyat Shemona 1 year after the Second Lebanon War (Kimhi & Eshel, ); and studies of Israeli identity and patriotism (Auron, ; Lazar, Chaitin, Gross, & Bar‐On, ). The scale contains 29 items, rated on a 6‐point scale ranging from 1 ( very strongly disagree ) to 6 ( very strongly agree ), and refers to trust in leadership, trust in the Israeli Defense Forces, patriotism, optimism, sense of danger, and trust in major national institutions.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Items of the National Resilience scale were taken from a number of studies: The Center for National Security at Haifa University (Ben‐Dor et al, ); a study on the individual and public resilience in the town of Kiriyat Shemona 1 year after the Second Lebanon War (Kimhi & Eshel, ); and studies of Israeli identity and patriotism (Auron, ; Lazar, Chaitin, Gross, & Bar‐On, ). The scale contains 29 items, rated on a 6‐point scale ranging from 1 ( very strongly disagree ) to 6 ( very strongly agree ), and refers to trust in leadership, trust in the Israeli Defense Forces, patriotism, optimism, sense of danger, and trust in major national institutions.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondary trauma after visiting the Auschwitz Museum and Memorial was highly prevalent among a vulnerable group: those students with the highest empathic concern, who easily included the victims into the self. This problem reflects the question of emotional overgeneralization observed among Israeli students visiting Nazi death camps in Poland (Lazar, Chaitin, Gross, & Bar-on, 2004) and the increased levels of anxiety found among Jewish participants in the March of the Living event at Auschwitz (Nager, Pham, Grajower, & Gold, 2016). Results of the studies of Jewish visitors to Auschwitz suggest that such visits lead to increased spirituality, which limits somatizations and other negative outcomes from visiting traumatic places (Nager et al, 2011).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, our study presents initial evidence about the potential risks involved in unprepared confrontations with memorial sites that commemorate a traumatic past. We suggest that visits to places like Auschwitz-Birkenau should be preceded by more intense elaborations of Holocaust history that could possibly reduce their detrimental effects on psychological well-being among the most empathic visitors and enhance these visitors' ability to work through the traumatic past (cf., Lazar et al, 2004). Such preparation could include providing sufficient information about the scale of the genocidal crime and images that could desensitize students before their exposure to naturalistic artifacts presented at the memorial sites.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous research on Holocaust education has emphasized the relevance of learning processes during excursions to Holocaust memorial places, especially the affective/emotional impact on students experiential learning (Romi & Lev, 2007), their modes of understanding the Holocaust (Lazar et al, 2004a), and their Jewish identity (Lazar et al, 2004b). However, limited research has explored experiential learning related to Holocaust memorial places with tertiary (Higher Education) students.…”
Section: Issues With Holocaust Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%