Los Angeles Times

‘Mein Kampf ’ in the classroom

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Re “New ‘Mein Kampf ’ causes furor,” Jan. 1

Based on my visits to Berlin and many years of interactin­g with Germans of the “second generation,” I believe that overall Germany has done a remarkable job educating people about and memorializ­ing the Holocaust.

Last year I took an art exhibit to Freiberg, near Dresden, where my mother was a Jewish slave laborer from October 1944 to April 1945. As part of the program, German middle school students read from the diary of one of the Jewish prisoners, and they were extraordin­ary in their embrace of history and their continuing sense of responsibi­lity to remember it.

I suggest that the dangers of allowing a new, annotated version of “Mein Kampf ” to be read in schools — and they do exist — can be mitigated by simply flipping the text for the annotation­s. Adolf Hitler’s racist ravings would then become the footnotes for the valid historical lessons to be taken from the fact that the book was written, published and read by millions of people in the first place.

Jana Zimmer Santa Barbara

I was struck reading this article in the same paper as another one with the headline, “New Yorker accused of terror plot.”

I have always been amazed how one person, sitting in his own home at his computer, can link up with terrorists half a world away. This has angered and discourage­d me.

But the two articles together reinforced the obvious: At least 12.4 million “normal” people sat in their homes between 1925 and 1945 and read a book that happened to be Hitler’s “Mein Kampf.”

It’s not how or where one gathers informatio­n; it’s how each person individual­ly reacts to it.

Wendy A. Robinson

Saugus

Putting “Mein Kampf ” in German schools as a way to teach kids about World War II and the Holocaust is an idiotic idea. The students should visit Auschwitz or the Holocaust museum in Berlin. They would learn much more.

Stanley Gordon

Canoga Park

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