The Jewish Federation of Greater Chattanooga in Tennessee is criticizing a local school board’s decision to ban a Pulitzer Prize-winning Holocaust book from its eighth-grade curriculum.

The federation’s executive director, Michael Dzik, spoke about the McMinn County School Board’s unanimous decision on Jan. 10 to remove Maus from its schools on the local television show “Let’s Chatt,” and argued that the work presents a softer approach to teaching middle-school students about a difficult topic.

“This is a challenging topic, and I think Mr. Spiegelman does a great job in explaining it,” said Dzik. “The Holocaust is gruesome, horrific; it’s the worst example of humanity. … I think this graphic novel does an amazing job of softly going through the Holocaust.”

“And let’s also remember, this is for eighth-graders,” he added. “It’s not for third-graders. This is for eighth-grade minds who’ve already had Holocaust education beginning in fifth grade—in the state of Tennessee, that’s when we begin.”

The McMinn County School Board said in a recent statement that it removed Maus from its eighth-grade curriculum because the book includes profanity and nudity (referring to a nude woman that Spiegelman had drawn as a mouse), and “its depiction of violence and suicide.”

“Taken as a whole, the board felt this work was simply too adult-oriented for use in our schools,” the statement said.

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