South Carolina Holocaust & Genocide Education Summary
Legal Status
- Mandated by law: No
- South Carolina established the **Council on the Holocaust** in 1989 (Title 1, Chapter 29) to develop Holocaust education programs and coordinate annual observances [oai_citation:0‡scstatehouse.gov](https://www.scstatehouse.gov/code/t01c029.php?utm_source=chatgpt.com)
- The Council works with the State Department of Education but there is no statewide mandate requiring schools to teach Holocaust or genocide content
How the Holocaust Appears in South Carolina’s Standards
Holocaust education is not mandated. Schools and districts may include it at their discretion and can draw on programs and materials from the Council.
Supplemental Teaching Tools Encouraged
- Materials and educator grants from the South Carolina Council on the Holocaust
- Programs such as traveling trunks, survivor testimony, and memorial events coordinated by the Council
- External resources from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Echoes & Reflections curriculum
Teaching Notes for South Carolina Educators
| Area | Guidance |
|---|---|
| Mandated by Law | No—statewide instruction not required |
| Council Oversight | South Carolina Council on the Holocaust (est. 1989, Title 1‑29) |
| Curriculum Inclusion | Optional; programs available at district discretion |
| Resources Available | Grants, traveling trunks, memorial observances |
Conclusion
South Carolina does not legally require Holocaust education in public schools. However, the South Carolina Council on the Holocaust—created in 1989—provides programs, resources, and support for districts that choose to include it. Educators can draw on Council-led offerings, survivor testimony, curricula like Echoes & Reflections, and museum materials to guide age-appropriate instruction.
