Extract from General Question Time in the Scottish Parliament: Holocaust Educational Trust - Jan 25
Friday, 26 January 2018 06:43
6. Adam Tomkins (Glasgow) (Con):To ask the Scottish Government what
support it is giving to the Holocaust Educational Trust.
(S5O-01699) The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for
Education and Skills (John Swinney): We must never forget the
Holocaust and the people who continue to suffer because of genocide
and intolerance, racism and bigotry. Since 2009, the Scottish
Government has provided the Holocaust Education Trust with funding
for the lessons from...Request free
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6. (Glasgow) (Con):To ask
the Scottish Government what support it is giving to the Holocaust
Educational Trust. (S5O-01699)
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for
Education and Skills (John Swinney): We must never
forget the Holocaust and the people who continue to suffer
because of genocide and intolerance, racism and bigotry.
Since 2009, the Scottish Government has provided the
Holocaust Education Trust with funding for the lessons from
Auschwitz project. The funding began in 2009 with £214,000 per
year and has since risen to £296,000 per year in 2017-18. That
is a total of £2.25 million over the period. That illustrates
the Government's commitment to providing opportunities for
Scotland's young people to develop as responsible citizens,
which is a key element of our curriculum. To date, the project
has reached more than 68 per cent of Scotland's schools, with
3,200 Scottish students having participated in it along with
more than 500 teachers.
: The Holocaust
Educational Trust plays a leading role in promoting Holocaust
memorial day, which is on Saturday and on which has a question in First
Minister's questions in a few moments. Holocaust memorial day
falls on the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, which
the Deputy First Minister visited with Scottish schoolchildren
recently.
It was my honour to open our
Parliament's annual Holocaust memorial day debate earlier this
month, which this year focused on the theme of the power of
words. Will the Scottish Government stand with me and with
every member of this Parliament who spoke in that debate in
pledging to remember the unique horror of the Holocaust and
thanking the Holocaust Educational Trust for its invaluable
work in ensuring that we will never forget?
[Applause.]
: I agree unreservedly
with the remarks that Mr Tomkins made in his question. The events
of the Holocaust must be forgotten by nobody, and as we look at
the troubled and uncertain world in which we live today, there is
even more requirement for people to be reminded of the horror of
the Holocaust.
As Mr Tomkins said, I accompanied
Scottish school pupils to Auschwitz-Birkenau in November.
Despite my having extensively studied that period of modern
history, nothing prepared me for what I witnessed. The
experience for our young people, of whom I was enormously proud
”they were much younger than me but were able to handle with
great dignity, care and understanding the events of that trip”
indicated to me that the investment that we make in the work of
the Holocaust Educational Trust is vital to ensuring that we
sustain among our young people that understanding and their
appreciation of those terrible events.
The First Minister represented the
Government at a Holocaust memorial day event last night in the
city of Glasgow, which was run by our schools and was another
fine tribute to the excellence that exists within Scottish
education, and to the deep understanding of the significance
and horror of the events that Mr Tomkins raises in Parliament
today.
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