Paperclips tells the story of how a
small town in Tennessee became the home to a large holocaust remembrance
project. The principle of Whitwell Middle School narrates the story of the
transformation of this school. This middle school is home to a homogenous
population of white protestant students. The school only has four African
Americans and one Hispanic. Although the town is currently in a state of
depression, the people still continue to have a happy and friendly manner. The
students have grown up never knowing diversity and living a very culturally
sheltered life. One teacher attended a conference in order to learn about new projects
to offer his students. There, he was inspired to teach about the Holocaust, and
this was the beginning of what has now become the Paperclips Project. When
teaching a class about the horrors of how six million people perished in the
holocaust, the school faced a challenge of portraying to small town children
such a large number. Because of their symbolic meaning and origin, the students
collected paperclips in order to commemorate the six million Jews lost in the
Holocaust.
The goal for
teaching about the holocaust was for the students to learn tolerance. The
teachers wanted their students to understand that stereotyping is wrong and to
see the effects through the history of the Holocaust. This message that the
teachers wanted the students to understand is given throughout the entire film
so that they audience can too. With each new person interview in the movie, he
or she begins their clip with how stereotypes have affected their life or
beliefs. These range from what they imagined a southern school to be like or
even what they assumed a German or Jew to look like. Through time spent with
the children on the project and a visit at the school all people involved
become enlightened on how all people are really the same. Watching others come
to these realizations helps the audience learn the lesson as well.
To continue this
extremely important message, the documentary highlights a special shipment of
paperclips received by the school. A suitcase was received from Germany that
held around fifteen paperclips each with a note attached. After the notes were
all translated the principal came to share the amazing package with the class.
The notes all were written by students in Germany writing to Anne Frank apologizing
for what had happened in the country’s past. The movie shows one note in
particular that gets read aloud to the class. This note finishes, “Regardless
of who we are or what we are, people are people.” This quote is then discussed other
times during the film as everyone found it such an impactful meaning to the
Paperclip Project.