Thursday,
February 09, 2012
16 Shevat, 5772
News
France
UK
Germany
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
EU-Israel affairs
US 2008 ELECTION
Iran - Holocaust
Conflict in Gaza
Voices
Culture
In Depth
Mideast Crisis
World Cup
On Anglo Jewry
Week at a glance
France Election
EU and Annapolis Summit
News from outside of Europe
Holocaust Remembrance Day
Mumbai Terror
DURBAN II
WILLIAMSON
Stories from our Readers
The Calendar
Links
advertisement
advertisement
wagerworks software

Poland's Jewish museum predicted to open in 2009
Updated: 16/Jun/2006 16:27
Page tools
Email to friend
Print this page
Bookmark this page
Add your view
BERLIN (AFP)--- Poland's new museum commemorating 800 years of Polish Jewry should open in 2009, two years after building begins next summer, the head of a German association supporting the project said on Wednesday.

Josef Thesing said the museum will aim to be a "narrative history museum" which seeks to educate people about the long and often painful history of Poland's Jews from the Middle Ages to WWII.

The museum will be built in the heart of Warsaw's former Jewish quarter, which was razed by the Nazis during the war.

The ghetto in 1943 saw the first Jewish uprising in Nazi-occupied Europe, triggered by the Nazis' drive to deport the remainder of its population to death camps after tens of thousands had already suffered that fate or died of hunger or illness.

Finnish architects

Related Articles
Polish president pledges 'zero tolerance' for anti-Semitism
Pope to recall Europe's murdered Jews at Auschwitz
Poland marks anniversary of ghetto uprising
Yad Vashem welcomes opening of Nazi archives at Bad Arolsen
Warsaw ghetto leader accuses Polish radio of anti-Semitism
Poles start asking about their absent Jewish neighbours
The agreement to build the museum came in January last year, days before the celebration of the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

The museum, which will be funded by the Polish state, is being designed by two Finnish architects, Rainer Mahlamaeki and Ilmani Lahdelma.

Some 52,000 documents and objects have been catalogued on a digital database and will be shown at the museum in a permanent exhibition.

Before WWII, around 3.5 million Jews lived in Poland, and Yiddish was the tongue and culture of 10 percent of the country's population.

The Nazis exterminated six million of Europe's 11 million Jews in the Holocaust, half of them Polish.

Add Your View Email to friend Print this page Bookmark this page
Daily quote

Ninety-seven saint days a year wouldn’t affect the theater, but two Yom Kippurs would ruin it

Brendan Behan, Irish author, who was born on 9 February 1923 
 
Day in history
1994: Yugoslavia

Peace plan for Bosnia and Herzegovina announced (so called Vance-Owen peace plan)
 
Latest Articles
Lee Zeitouni’s family not allowed to attend CRIF dinner
German court caps Jewish ghetto pension claims
French government walks out of parliament after 'Nazi' taunt
EU will not recall its ambassador in Damascus, ‘important to have people to follow the situation’
EU says it will continue giving money to the Palestinian Authority despite deal with Hamas
Hungarian foreign ministry condemns Jobbik MP’s comments questioning the Holocaust and comparing Israel to a Nazi system
ADL welcomes US decision to close its embassy in Damascus