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The Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow: Judaism for the masses.

Authors :
Gershenson, Olga
Source :
East European Jewish Affairs; Aug-Dec2015, Vol. 45 Issue 2/3, p158-173, 16p
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In 2012, a new Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center opened in Moscow -- an event unthinkable during the Soviet regime. Financed at the level of $50 million, created by an international crew of academics and museum designers, and located in a landmark building, the museum immediately rose to a position of cultural prominence in the Russian museum scene. Using interactive technology and multimedia, the museum's core exhibition presents several centuries of complex local Jewish history, including the Second World War period. Naturally, the Holocaust is an important part of the story. Olga Gershenson's essay analyzes the museum's relationship to Holocaust history and memory in the post-Soviet context. She describes the museum's struggle to reconcile a Soviet understanding of the "Great Patriotic War" with a dominant Western narrative of the Holocaust, while also bringing the Holocaust in the Soviet Union to a broader audience via the museum. Through recorded testimonies, period documents, and film, the museum's display narrates the events of the Holocaust on Soviet soil. This is a significant revision of the Soviet-era discourse, which universalized and externalized the Holocaust. But this important revision is limited by the museum's choice to avoid the subject of local collaborators and bystanders. The museum shies away from the most pernicious aspect of the Holocaust history on Soviet soil, missing an opportunity to take historic responsibility and confront the difficult past. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13501674
Volume :
45
Issue :
2/3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
East European Jewish Affairs
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
115207085
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/13501674.2015.1062668