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Jewish Museum

Berlin Jewish Museum, Copyright BTM
The Jewish Museum in Berlin is a fascinating addition to Europe's museum landscape. A vibrant repository of German Jewish history and culture, the centre serves as a forum for research, discussion and new ideas. The musuem is suitable for everyone – young and old, Germans and foreigners, Jews and gentiles. Public guided tours are held several times a week. Specialist tours of the exhibitions and individual tours on Jewish history and culture can be arranged on request. Closed 30 September-1 October 2008 (Rosh Hashanah), 9 October 2008 (Yom Kippur) and 24 December.
 
Exterior of the Jewish Museum, Berlin; Libeskind building, © Jewish Museum, Berlin; Photo: Jens Ziehe
Opened in Berlin in 2001, Europe's largest Jewish Museum is one of the most striking examples of contemporary architecture. The sparkling, triumphant, steel-clad structure is a symbolic memorial in its own right. The museum presents the history of Jews in Germany from the Middle Ages to the present.
 

A centre for German Jewish history and culture

The remarkable museum building created by the architect Daniel Libeskind is also a monument to the life of the Jewish people, its design based on half a Star of David. The extravagant structure sets a new benchmark, for the relationship between the museum collections and the architecture is unique. The construction of the Jewish Museum has seen the creation of a building full of metaphor, a true cause for contemplation. The exhibition gives visitors an insight into the fateful lives of the Jews, full of tolerance yet also persecution, of great accomplishments and wretched injustice. They saw both significant progress and tragic regression and ostracism.
 
 
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Exhibits

Jankel Adler, Sabbat, Öl und Sand on canvas, © Jewish Museum, Berlin; Photo: Jens Ziehe, Berlin
The autonomous Jewish Museum consists of two buildings, connected by underground passages. The permanent historical exhibition presents 2,000 years of Jewish culture and German-Jewish history on an area of approximately 3,000m², focusing on flight, expulsion and new beginnings, and especially the forced exodus of German Jews. The library holds numerous historical books about the religion and history of the Jews and the archive stores around 700 volumes of documents and photos of the fates of individuals and families between the 18th century and today. The Judaica collection comprises representative ceremonial objects in a wide range of media, including textiles, works on paper and metalwork. Workshops and discussions, readings and concerts - a varied events programme completes the museum's exhibition.
 
 
 
 
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