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One in 20 UK schoolchildren thought Adolf Hitler was a
coach of the German football team, a charity survey has
revealed.
And one in six youngsters said they thought Auschwitz was
a Second World War theme park while one in 20 said the Holocaust
was a celebration at the end of the war.
The survey for a veterans' charity also found one in 10
thought the SS stood for Enid Blyton's Secret Seven, and
one in 12 believed the Blitz was a European clean-up operation
following the Second World War.
Scottish-based charity Erskine, which provides nursing
and medical care for veterans, said it would now take part
in a nationwide scheme to educate schoolchildren about the
two world conflicts.
The charity questioned 2,000 children between the ages
of nine and 15 about their knowledge of the key people and
events of the two wars.
While a quarter admitted they did not think about the soldiers
who died in the conflicts, and 40 per cent said they did
not know when Remembrance Day was, 70 per cent of all those
surveyed said they wanted to learn more about the two wars
in school.
Major Jim Panton, chief executive of Erskine, said: "Some
of the answers to this poll have shocked us and it has shown
that Erskine, amongst others, has a part to play, not just
in caring for veterans but in educating society as a whole."
The charity said it wanted some of the 1,350 veterans it
cares for every year to share their experiences of the war
with younger generations.
Erskine will work in partnership with Their Past Your Future
(TPYF) project, a partnership of the Imperial War Museum,
the Museums, Libraries and Archives England, the Northern
Ireland Museum Council, the National Library of Wales and
the Scottish Museums Council, to help schoolchildren learn
more about the conflicts.
Andrew Salmond, a project manager for TPYF in Scotland,
said: "This initiative offers a fantastic opportunity
to inform young people about the experiences of war - both
at home and abroad."
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