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Surprising poll findings: 20% of Gen Z deny Holocaust, 28% perceive excessive Jewish influence in US

The Forgotten Holocaust: ⁣A Wake-Up Call for ⁤America’s Youth

The philosopher George‌ Santayana⁢ wrote, “Those⁣ who cannot ‍remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” But no one could have predicted that it would take ‌less than 100 years for us ⁢to forget one of the most heinous atrocities committed against one ‌people group ⁣in ⁣modern ‌history — the Holocaust.

A‍ recent survey on Holocaust⁣ knowledge in ​America unveiled a profound​ and disturbing ignorance among​ young adults about ⁣the attempted genocide of the Jewish people, according to U.K. ‍outlet The Guardian.

Commissioned by the⁤ Conference on Jewish Material Claims​ Against ⁣Germany, the survey ⁢polled⁣ 1,000 adults aged 18-39‌ nationwide about basic facts concerning the ‌Nazi extermination ⁤of 6 million European‍ Jews. The results⁤ were alarming.

Nearly⁣ two-thirds⁢ of young Americans do not even know that six million Jews ⁣died in ⁢the Holocaust. Over a third believe 2 million or less perished ​— a ​staggering underestimate.

Almost half of millennial and Gen Z adults aged between 18‍ and 39 could not name a ⁣single concentration ‌camp​ or ghetto ‌— emblems of Nazi brutality and the infrastructure of genocide.

Even more ​shocking numbers of young adults have bought into dangerous Holocaust denialism and distortion, the survey revealed.

Nearly a quarter believe the Holocaust has been exaggerated or are not even sure it ‍happened. One in eight have ⁢never ​heard of it at all.

Over half have seen Nazi symbols⁣ promoted on social​ media.

In ‍addition, 28 percent ‌in the 18-29 demographic believe “Jews ‍have too much‍ power in America,” according to the poll.

The‌ survey was the first to drill‌ down to the state ‌level⁢ to determine ​beliefs about the Holocaust.

It ranked states from highest to lowest Holocaust knowledge​ based on residents’ awareness of⁣ basic facts. Wisconsin scored ⁤highest, while Florida, Mississippi and Arkansas ranked lowest nationwide.

Almost one in five New Yorkers blamed the Jews as the cause of⁣ the‍ very⁤ Holocaust that ‌destroyed their ⁤ancestors. Louisiana,⁢ Tennessee, Montana and other states display similar shameful statistics.

Gideon Taylor, president of the Conference on⁣ Jewish Material⁢ Claims Against Germany, said, ⁣“The results are both⁤ shocking and saddening,⁣ and ⁢they​ underscore⁢ why we must act now while Holocaust survivors are still with us to voice their‌ stories.”

“This needs to ⁤serve ‌as⁢ a‍ wake-up call to us all, ⁣and as a road map⁢ of where government officials need to act,” Taylor added.

A large portion of the ⁤blame for this lack of education can be placed on educational institutions, which​ have pushed Marxist⁢ ideologies, including Holocaust denial.

The shameful testimonies ​of the presidents​ of Harvard, Penn, and MIT, as reported by this week are clear evidence of the culture ⁤being promoted in these so-called ​elite institutions.

But ‍the memories of ‌Americans are even shorter than that.

Last month, the hashtag #lettertoamerica went viral on TikTok as thousands of⁣ Tiktokers encouraged⁣ their millions ‍of⁣ followers‍ to‍ read Osama bin ‍Laden’s 2002 “Letter to America,” claiming it ‌revealed “truths” about Israel⁣ and Middle East foreign policy they aren’t taught in school, according to The National Desk.

Warning: This video contains ⁢language​ that may be offensive to some people.

It‍ took a bunch of smirking⁤ elite university presidents’ blatantly admitting to Congress that calling for the genocide​ of⁢ Jews⁢ only violates ⁢the ⁤rules ‌of conduct of their university​ depending on the “context” to ⁢bring attention to ‍the Marxist​ ideology and historical whitewashing happening ⁣to ​young people⁤ in educational institutions,‌ leading ‌to​ threats of​ pulled back donations, according‍ to CNN.

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