New Jersey school board defends 5th grade student and teacher over Hitler assignment

A New Jersey school board is defending an elementary school student after a character development assignment about Adolf Hitler drew community criticism that it glorified the Holocaust.

The picture of the assignment, from a fifth grade student at Maugham Elementary School, was shared over Memorial Day weekend on social media, where backlash began to mount. Lori Birk, the woman who posted the photo on Facebook, said the student dressed as Hitler while presenting the "Character Development project" to the class.

Under accomplishments, the child's assignment read: "I was very popular and many people followed me until I died. My belif in antisemitism drove me to kill more than 6 million Jews," according to the post.

"This is ignorance, antisemitism and hatred taught at a fifth grade level," Birk wrote. "Shame on the parents who helped their child dress as Hitler and the teacher who has approved such hatred."

Birk said that the assignment was sent to her by a friend who has a child at the school and that it was posted in the school's hallway. The parent did not wish to be interviewed, Birk said.

The assignment, which drew widespread attention, was addressed in a statement from Scott Richman, regional director of the Anti-Defamation League's New York and New Jersey branch.

"Educational assignments, especially those centered around the history of genocide and oppression, need to be handled carefully and sensitive to those who may be personally impacted," Richman said. "We have reached out to local school officials and look forward to offering our support to the school and district to address this situation and build stronger educational practices moving forward."

Tenafly Public Schools Superintendent Shauna DeMarco said in a statement Monday that the district was aware of the assignment and was investigating it.

DeMarco then said in a joint statement with the school board Tuesday that the assignment had been to look at historical figures who personified good and evil and that in that context, "it is unfair to judge any student or teacher in this matter."

"The assignment (which was given by a teacher who happens to be Jewish) asked students to speak from the perspective of one of these individuals and how they might have perceived and rationalized their actions," the statement said. "When people saw the students' projects, which were displayed in the school, they did not understand the assignment, resulting in justifiable concerns."