The Holocaust Educational Trust (HET) will launch its Testimony 360 programme across schools in the UK, allowing pupils to have lifelike, face-to-face conversations with survivors through innovative technology.
The first part of the programme uses AI to enable pupils to have a question and answer session with a virtual version of a Holocaust survivor via a laptop and headphones. The second part allows pupils to explore key sites related to the survivor's testimony through a virtual reality headset, including where they lived before and the concentration camps or ghettoes they were detained in.
The chief executive of the HET, Karen Pollock, described the programme, piloted across 15 schools with 800 students taking part, as stimulating and critical owing to the recent rise in antisemitism and the reducing numbers of Holocaust survivors able to share their testimony.
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