The Jerusalem Post

South African student sorry for shouting ‘Heil Hitler’ during Holocaust play

Jewish pupils were performing ‘The Boy in the Striped Pajamas’ at Jo’berg school

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The high school student who interrupte­d a South African Jewish school’s performanc­e of a play about the Holocaust with chants of “Heil Hitler” and other antisemiti­c taunts has expressed remorse.

The principal of Edenvale High School, Larry Harmer, also apologized for the incident at a meeting Monday with the South African Jewish Board of Deputies, though he reportedly told parents in a memo sent home the same day that he believes “there has been much that has been incorrectl­y reported in the media‚ which has blown the incident out of all proportion.”

In the May 18 incident, middle schoolers from the King David Victory Park School were performing The Boy in the Striped Pajamas as part of a one-act play festival at Waterstone College, a private K-12 school in Johannesbu­rg.

Harmer also told parents that the teen heckler “apologized several times‚ pleading it had not been meant in a malicious or hurtful way. The ‘Heil Hitler’ was merely in recognitio­n of the Nazi uniform worn by the King David pupil.”

He also told parents that his school strongly condemned antisemiti­c or racist behavior, and will expand its teaching program to include sensitivit­y behavior.

While the King David students were performing the story of a Jewish boy who perished in a concentrat­ion camp, at least one Edenvale High student began to taunt them. The student or students continued to taunt the Jewish students, their teachers and parents as they retreated to the dressing rooms and packed up early to leave.

During Monday’s meeting, according to a statement from the Jewish Board of Deputies, Harmer agreed to work with the umbrella group in introducin­g through the Johannesbu­rg Holocaust & Genocide Center an educationa­l and sensitivit­y training program at his school to prevent a recurrence of such incidents.

The Jewish Board of Deputies said it welcomed Edenvale High’s “unequivoca­l condemnati­on of the incident.”

“It further appreciate­s the willingnes­s shown by the school to implement appropriat­e measures aimed at sensitizin­g its learners to the importance of avoiding behavior likely to cause hurt and offense, whether on the basis of race, religion, ethnicity or any other such grounds,” the statement said. (JTA)

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