HR-943-116
Became Public Law No: 116-141.
What it does
This law expands the educational programming of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. It requires the museum to develop and distribute accurate, accessible resources nationwide to improve public awareness and understanding of the Holocaust. It also authorizes the museum to run programs that engage both current and prospective teachers and school leaders.
Who benefits
K-12 students who would receive Holocaust education through improved classroom resources; current and prospective teachers and school administrators who would gain access to professional development and curriculum materials; the general public who would have broader access to Holocaust awareness resources; the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, which would receive expanded authorization and funding for its educational mission.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the expanded museum programming; competing educational priorities or organizations that may receive less federal attention or funding as resources are directed toward this program. No specific group faces direct harm, though some may object to federal involvement in curriculum-adjacent programming.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Holocaust education is a proven tool for combating antisemitism, genocide, and prejudice more broadly, and that a federally supported, nationally consistent program ensures all students — regardless of their state or school district — have access to accurate historical information. They contend that the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum is uniquely positioned as a nonpartisan, authoritative institution to develop and distribute these materials, and that teacher training is essential because many educators lack confidence or resources to teach this subject effectively. Supporters also point to rising rates of antisemitism and declining Holocaust awareness among younger generations as evidence of urgent need for this kind of structured, national educational effort.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that curriculum decisions are traditionally reserved to states and local school districts under the Tenth Amendment, and that federal involvement — even through a museum's programming — risks centralizing control over what and how history is taught. They contend that existing state-level Holocaust education mandates and private educational organizations already address this need, making a new federal program duplicative and an unnecessary use of taxpayer funds. Some may also raise concerns that expanding one institution's national educational role sets a precedent for federal influence over historical narratives, and that limited federal education dollars could be more broadly distributed to address a wider range of historical literacy gaps across the curriculum.