Active Citizen
In a Dictatorship, (A form of government in which the ruler is an absolute dictator and not restricted by a constitution, laws or opposition) people tend to be in one of the three camps:
The Activist
The Bystander
The Perpetrator
The Activist (Or Resistor):
One who actively engages in open or secret resistance against the government and believes strongly in democracy. They agitate and try to remind their countrymen and women that no one is safe in a dictatorship.
Mahatmas Gandhi
India: 1930
After trying to break the hold of mighty British Empire, Gandhi developed the idea of non-violent action. Using mass peaceful protests, defiance, and hunger strikes to provoke a response, Gandhi was able to bring independence to India.
Rosa Parks
Alabama: 1955
Parks, a 42 year old seamstress refused to give up her bus seat to a white man. Setting the wheels in motion for Martin Luther King’s non violent bus boycott, Rosa Parks is considered the "mother of the civil Rights movement"
Sophia M. Scholl
Munich: 1943
22 year old German Sophia Scholl was a member of the non-violent group called the White Rose. Opposing Nazi rule, the group members were arrested when a custodian saw them leave their leaflets on the desks of their university. The Nazi Party had the group beheaded, yet their spirit went on to inspire others.
"Tank Man"
China: 1989
An unknown man steps in front of a column of tanks in protest of the bloody repression of students by China's Communist government.
Nina Wilson, Sheelah Mclean, Sylvia McAdam and Jessica Gordon
Canada: 2012
Founders of the "Idle No More" campaign in November 2012, these women began with an idea to raise awareness around the Canadian Government's Bill C-45, and ended up starting an international movement.
IDLE NO MORE SHORT DOCUMENTARY
Autumn Peltier
Canada: Present - day
A member of the Wiikwemkoong First Nation, Autumn Peltier is a water activist - or Water Protector - and is known throughout the world for her work.
THE TEEN FIGHTING TO PROTECT CANADA'S WATER
The Bystander:
These are people who don’t necessarily support the dictator but whom say nothing against it. They try to go on with their daily lives and to "weather the storm." today, it is easy to judge from the safety of our homes and couches. We watch documentaries on the history channel and declare that if we were in Nazi Germany we would fight the system. Would we?
Would you?
Or would we keep our head down and hope things would improve?
Are there situations when peaceful protest will not work?
"In Germany they first came for the Communists, and I didn't’ speak up because I wasn’t a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't’ speak up because I wasn’t a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn’t speak up because I wasn’t a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn’t speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time no one else was left to speak up."
- Martin Niemoller
Question: Does peaceful protest always work?
Peaceful Hippies under scrutiny by police. Late 1960’s.
Would peaceful protest have worked in Nazi Germany 1933 – 1945?
The Active Participant or Perpetraitor:
These are people who see opportunity and use the fear, hate and violence of a dictatorship to further themselves at the expense of others. Unfortunately the list is long and infamous.
Irma Greise
The B**** of Buchenwald
This SS Guard showed extreme cruelty towards the inmates of Buchenwald. After the war, Greise was captured and executed during the Nuremburg trials of 1945.
Roy Cohn
Architect of the Red scare
Assisting Joseph McCarthy, Cohn helped "investigate" (i.e. torture people in order to get information) communist infiltration in America during the "Red Scare."
Adolf Eichmann
The Banality of Evil
Eichmann was the bureaucratic of the Holocaust. Thanks to his orderly and efficient manner, Eichmann was put in charge of shipping thousands of Jews to their deaths.
Assignment: Types of Citizens
As a class, we will watch the 2008 movie The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. This movie is an excellent review of types of citizenship, as well as the ideologies that . After you have watched the movie, please answer the questions on the sheet (at left).
Boy in the Striped Pyjamas.pdf
Fahrenheit 11/9 (2020).pdf
Boy in the Striped PJ Rubric.pdf
Overall Curriculum Expectations Addressed:
A1. Political Inquiry: use the political inquiry process and the concepts of political thinking when
investigating issues, events, and developments of civic importance;
A2. Developing Transferable Skills: apply in everyday contexts skills developed through investigations
related to civics and citizenship education, and identify some careers in which civics and citizenship
education might be an asset.
B3.Rights and Responsibilities: analyse key rights and responsibilities associated with citizenship, in both
the Canadian and global context, and some ways in which these rights are protected
C1.Civic Contributions: analyse a variety of civic contributions, and ways in which people can contribute
to the common good.
C2. Inclusion and Participation: assess ways in which people express their perspectives on issues of civic
importance and how various perspectives, beliefs, and values are recognized and represented in communities
in Canada.
How did Hitler get Power in Germany?
It is important to remember that, initially, Hitler's NSDAP Party (the Nazi Party) was elected into office. How does this happen? Download the handout below for a simplified answer to this question.
How Crazy Gets Power.pdf
Assignment #2: The Rant, The Song, or The Editorial
Do YOU have a comment to make? Are you full of political angst? Are you artistic? Well, choose your assignment and show us how to be an active citizen?
The Rant, The Song, or The Editorial Assignment