According to a new poll, nearly 2/3 of young adults in American were unaware of how many Jews were of the Holocaust. The poll also showed 15 percent of young American adults believe the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust was exaggerated.
According to a new poll, nearly 2/3 of young adults in American were unaware of how many Jews were of the Holocaust. The poll also showed 15 percent of young American adults believe the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust was exaggerated.
Historical ignorance not only prevents us from learning from the evils of the past, we risk not even being able to recognize the evils of the past when they reemerge in our time.
If you influence anyone for the Lord after being influenced by someone else, that person’s ministry continues through you as well. This is one reason our Lord measures success by faithfulness rather than popularity.
On the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz (Jan. 27), the time has come to turn the sorrow into song.
On the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, it is important to recognize that there is a very real human tendency to mis-remember the grave evils of history: to imagine that they happened in a different world; to think that those who perpetuated such evil, or those who scandalously remained silent and complicit, were somehow different kinds of people than we are.
Today is International Holocaust Remembrance Day. The United Nations General Assembly designated January 27, the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau, as this annual day of commemoration.
A Lebanese Christian spent thousands of dollars to buy Nazi artifacts at an auction in order to keep them out of the hands of neo-Nazis. The man, Abdallah Chatila, was honored this weekend by the President of Israel.