The Jerusalem Post

Yad Vashem signs first seminar agreement with Serbia’s Education Ministry

Teachers from European country will now receive full accreditat­ion for studies

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

Yad Vashem signed its first-ever memorandum of understand­ing with Serbia’s Education Ministry on Monday, formalizin­g the working relationsh­ip it has with the Serbian government.

The agreement was signed in the presence of Assistant Minister of Education Dr. Aleksandar Pajic at the conclusion of a profession­al developmen­t seminar at Yad Vashem’s Internatio­nal School for Holocaust Studies in Jerusalem.

Thirty educators from Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a participat­ed in the seminar, during which Biljana Stojanovic of the Serbian Ministry of Education, Science and Technologi­cal Developmen­t delivered a presentati­on about the ministry’s work in Holocaust education.

For many years, Serbian teachers have participat­ed in workshops and educationa­l seminars run by Yad Vashem for teachers and community leaders from all over the world.

“Our pedagogica­l approach is respected as one of the best methodolog­ies to deal with this most sensitive topic,” said Dr. Eyal Kaminka, director of Yad Vashem’s Internatio­nal School for Holocaust Studies, who signed the agreement on behalf of the center. “We have government­al partnershi­ps with more than 50 countries around the world and are thrilled to officially add Serbia to this prestigiou­s group.”

Until now, educators from Serbia who participat­ed in seminars at Yad Vashem did so in an unofficial capacity. Now Serbian teachers will receive full accreditat­ion for their participat­ion and the number of seminars offered to them is set to increase.

Serbia has been one of Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s 31 member countries since 2011, and Bosnia and Herzegovin­a became an observer country in 2016.

Holocaust education is part of the national high-school curriculum in Serbia, integrated into courses in history, sociology, philosophy and religion.

After Serbian educators participat­ed in teacher training in Yad Vashem, senior high-school students have conducted research projects on the life of the Jewish population in Serbia before, during and after World War II. The aim of these projects is to raise public awareness of the Holocaust, particular­ly among young Serbians.

Each year, the Internatio­nal School engages some 300,000 students, and thousands of educators, community leaders and decision-makers from around the world. It offers educationa­l materials, teaching tools and teacher-training activities in order to develop programs suitable for diverse age groups and cultures.

 ?? (Yad Vashem) ?? DR. ALEKSANDAR PAJIC (left), Serbia’s assistant minister of education, and Dr. Eyal Kaminka, director of Yad Vashem’s Internatio­nal School for Holocaust Studies, sign the agreement in Jerusalem yesterday.
(Yad Vashem) DR. ALEKSANDAR PAJIC (left), Serbia’s assistant minister of education, and Dr. Eyal Kaminka, director of Yad Vashem’s Internatio­nal School for Holocaust Studies, sign the agreement in Jerusalem yesterday.

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