From 4 March to 17 June 2023
The tour will take place in the 1st and 2nd arrondissements of Lyon, in order to highlight the actions of this great Resistance fighter and to present the other companions who helped him in his missions. This, as well as the circumstances and consequences of his arrest, which took place on 21 June 1943. Steles, but also buildings from that period, recall his history in this city where Resistance fighters and collabos clashed violently.
https://www.chrd.lyon.fr/musee/parcours-urbain/sur-les-pas-de-jean-moulin
March 16 at the Rashi Institute in Troyes
This book is the result of international research work carried out in Troyes in 2019. It was conceived in the framework of a partnership between the Institut Universitaire Européen Rachi and the Laboratoire d’Etudes sur les Monothéismes (LEM-CNRS) and published in the prestigious journal Studia Graeco-Arabica.
16 and 17 March 2023 at the headquarters of the Grand Est Region
The European Centre of Deported Resistance Members is organising this event, which brings together a dozen speakers and examines the relationships underlying the association of faith and deportation. In particular, religious practice in the camps. The programme is a continuation of last year’s event on the same themes.
13 February 2023 at the GIL
Joëlle Fiss, Bénédicte Ossipaw-Amsellem and Marc Wuarin, members of GIL, will discuss their experience in Geneva politics, particularly in the field of human rights. This conference is organised by the GIL Cultural Commission.
https://www.gil.ch/evenement/lundi-du-gil-conference-25
28 and 29 March 2023 at the Théâtre de l’Espérance
Kressmann Taylor’s masterpiece evokes the meeting and friendship between two Germans, a Jew and a non-Jew. Their strong bond and the evolution of this friendship and their perception of the historical events in progress. The play is presented by the Hamacom troupe.
15 March 2023 at the Jewish Museum of Switzerland
A series of cultural events will be held on Wednesday mornings at the Museum. This one will deal with the fate of Jewish refugees in Switzerland from 1935 to 1955 and the help they received.
17 February to 24 September 2023 at the Jewish Museum Amsterdam
A series of texts, covering different writing styles, evoke the theme of the author’s identity. By returning to the question of Jewish identity. For there are many ways to answer this question. The documents presented cover four centuries of Dutch Jewish authors. Was this Jewish identity private or publicly known? Did it evolve? And how do we perceive it with our contemporary glasses?
https://jck.nl/en/exhibition/me-jewish
18 March to 11 June 2023 at the Rembrandt Museum
74 works from the Peck Collection are presented for the first time in Europe. The exhibition includes works by Rembrandt, but also by Bol, Maes and their contemporaries. Seven moments in the exhibition focus on the question of why 17th-century artists were so dedicated to drawing. Workshops are offered to enable visitors to familiarise themselves with the techniques of the period.
https://www.rembrandthuis.nl/en/program-2023/
18 February 2023 at the National Museum of Resistance and Human Rights
This visit allows you to rediscover the architectural heritage of Esch, as well as its history. More specifically, the city centre at the beginning of the 20th century and during the Shoah. The themes of the Nazi occupation, the resistance and the fate of the Jews are addressed. In particular around the Stolpersteine, the memorial stones.
At the Jewish Museum of Latvia
A presentation of these works is proposed to examine how individuals react to tragedies that take place in their vicinity. The exhibition, together with the history of the Riga ghetto, is part of a larger project “Art and the Holocaust: Reflections on a Common Future”. The Latvian artist Belcova conceived these works as a therapy for the vision of the Shoah. Upon her death in 1981, Belcova’s works were bequeathed by her family to the Latvian National Art Museum.
14 February 2023 at the Carlo and Vera Wagner Museum
A presentation that will take place in the presence of Dunja Nanut (President of ANED Trieste), Franco Cecotti (Vice President of ANED Trieste), Tristano Matta (historian) and Michelle Visentini (great-granddaughter of Rosalia Poropat). A reconstruction of Rosalia Poropat’s story is carried out, from her arrest in her town of Dane, her incarceration in the prison of Trieste and her deportation to Auschwitz and then Ravensbruck. There she wrote the names of 51 fellow prisoners on a roll of paper during forced labour at Siemens. The scroll is now in the Risiera di San Sabba Museum.
https://www.museoebraicotrieste.it/en/2023/02/06/rosalia-poropat-2/
12 March 2023 at the Jewish Museum of Ireland
Brazilian researcher Denise Sabino Villanova will talk about contemporary Sephardim and their attachment to their roots and cultural heritage. Going back to the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisition, she will analyse how to preserve one’s faith under threat. With a desire to understand the evolution of Sephardic history and improve the understanding of this identity in our contemporary world.
From 6 February 2023 at the Jewish Museum of Greece
A project with five other European partners: Centropa Zentrum (Hamburg), Centropa Alipitvany (Hungary), Jugend & Kulturprojekt (Dresden), Fundacja Galicia Jewish Heritage Institute (Poland) and Mozaika (Spain). It aims to strengthen the memory of 20th century Jewish history and the Shoah. Events will be organised in the form of workshops, educational seminars and public participations.
https://www.jewishmuseum.gr/en/launch-of-a-new-two-year-european-project-called-herstories
28 March 2023 at the Museo Sefardi
This club brings together literary encounters once a month to discuss a book and share impressions of it. An event that takes place in the museum’s library. The one on 28 March will be the first in a series and will be dedicated to Luisa Carnés’ tea room.
https://www.culturaydeporte.gob.es/msefardi/en/actividades/agenda/2023/febrero/taller-lectura.html
In February 2023 at the EHC
A kidush celebrating the holiday of Tu bishvat is being organised by the Edinburgh community. The event will feature Rachel Caplan, a producer who promotes environmental issues in the arts. The links between ecology and Judaism will be discussed.
https://ecosynagogue.org/events
Until 14 August 2023 at the Jewish Museum of Belgium
On 19 April 1943, the 20th convoy left the transit camp of Mechelen to deport 1,631 Jews to Auschwitz. Resistance actions from both inside and outside the wagons saved 236 of these deportees, who were thus able to jump from the train that was destined for extermination. The contemporary Belgian artist Jo Struyven presents his photographs of landscapes along this escape route. Two paintings by the Belgian painter Luc Tuymans evoke the massacre of Jews and Roma during the Holocaust. These presentations allow us to pursue the question of the place of artistic representation of such tragedies.
From 16 February to 10 March 2024 at the Kazerne Dossin
The exhibition presents a little-known aspect of the Second World War: the fate of homosexuals in various countries such as Belgium, France, the Netherlands and Germany. Numerous unpublished documents illustrate the persecution suffered by homosexual men and women under the Nazi regime. In Germany, 100,000 homosexuals were registered, half of whom were sentenced and between 5,000 and 15,000 sent to concentration camps.
https://kazernedossin.eu/fr/expo/exposition-temporaire-homosexuels-et-lesbiennes-dans-leurope-nazie/
23 April at 2 p.m., at the Dieweg cemetery
This walk is one of several in the Belgian capital. Familiar and more unusual places, bearing witness to Jewish life past and present. During this walk, which takes place in the small cemetery located in the south of Brussels, a history tour will reveal the golden age of Brussels Judaism at the end of the 19th and 20th centuries. Some of the actors of this golden age are buried there, witnesses of the social ascension in Belgium and of the participation of the Jews to its greatness in many fields.
Until 4 June 2023 in the Jewish Museum Vienna
The exhibition aims to show how clichés can create misunderstandings in society. The exhibition aims to show how clichés can lead to misunderstandings in society, on a variety of topics such as the meaning of family in Judaism, knowledge and melancholy. All these perceptions create stereotypes, even prejudices. It is more of a presentation and questions than an attempt to deconstruct these perceptions. These perceptions appeared in particular during the covid and the conspiracy theories concerning vaccines. Clichés from which the Jews themselves are not immune to.
https://www.jmw.at/exhibition/100_misunderstandings_about_and_among_jews
11 March 2023 at the Freud Museum
Organised as part of the series dedicated to discussions on the theme of “Refugees and Immigration”, a round table discussion brings together Daniela Finzi, Diane O’Donoghue, Emily Kuriloff and Pamela Cooper-White, with moderator Tom Kohut. They will discuss the disappearance of psychoanalytic institutions during the Holocaust. Focusing on how individuals, their families and organisations overcame or failed to overcome past loss and destruction in the post-war period.
https://www.freud-museum.at/en/detail/refugee-psychoanalysts
Until 7 July 2023 at the Jewish Museum London
These rather surprising meetings bring to the table the sometimes complex issues of contemporary Jewish life. Institutional representatives and individuals share their experiences. The museum offers a wide range of topics for discussion. For example: the representativeness of institutions including the Jewish Museum, the involvement of institutions in safeguarding for the future…
26 February 2023 at Jamboree, 6 St Chad’s Place, London
Klezmer music is making amazing encounters all over the world, notably in France with the Jazz n’klezmer Festival. With Andalusian, Gypsy, Mediterranean music… During this festival, a moving encounter with contemporary jazz will be presented as part of the Sunday lunchtime reception. This event is part of the Big Band Performance series.
Until 1 May 2023 at the Jewish Museum Berlin
The museum presents the first exhibition in Berlin dedicated to the Jewish artists of the École de Paris. These artists were attracted by the creativity and artistic freedom offered by the city, particularly in the residence La Ruche in Montparnasse. More than 120 works will be exhibited on this occasion, by artists such as Marc Chagall, Amedeo Modigliani, Chana Orloff, Sonia Delaunay and Jacques Lipchitz. The influence of these artists on contemporary art will also be highlighted.
https://www.jmberlin.de/en/exhibition-paris-magnetique
Until 5 March 2023 at the Jewish Museum Augsburg
In partnership with a primary school in Augsburg, the Jewish Museum is organising, as it did last year, an exhibition to raise awareness of this holiday. The historical aspect and its importance in the hope carried by the symbolism of the lit candles.
https://jmaugsburg.de/en/exhibitions/chanukka-installation/
Until February 12, 2023 at the Dorotheergasse Jewish Museum
Director James T. Hong explores the difficult and painful issue of forgiveness. A theme that has been prominent since German Chancellor Willy Brandt’s gesture in 1970 at the monument to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Heads of state from all corners of the world have since expressed public regret on a variety of issues, from historical questions to personal stories that could not be kept private. Questions of sincerity, of the share of emotion and communication, of the repetition of the “never again” concept are explored…
https://www.jmw.at/exhibition/james_t_hong_apologies_v_20162_2021
Exposition « Shoulder to shoulder? Jewish involvement in Poland’s aspirations for independence 1794-1918 »
Until March 26, 2023 at the Emanuel Ringelblum Jewish Historical Institute
This exhibition examines the participation of Polish Jews in the struggle for independence from the end of the 18th century to the end of the First World War. What particularly motivated these struggles, especially the patriotic fibre, and when did they sometimes feel excluded by certain ambitions from these struggles? What were the links between citizens of different faiths united under the same uniform? 150 objects are presented: texts, photos and paintings. Amongst the characters honoured, Berek Joselewicz, war hero for the fatherland and other lesser known figures.
https://www.jhi.pl/en/exhibitions/shoulder-to-shoulder,370
Until May 21, 2023 at the Jewish Museum of Munich
This exhibition, produced in partnership with the Jewish Museum in Hohenems, attempts to get to the root of the idea of the European project. What did it envisage and is it true to its original promise? Are national and continental issues compatible? Jewish individuals who pursued and accompanied this dream of a Europe of Enlightenment and its struggle for equal rights are presented. All these questions are addressed in the exhibition, examining threats and opportunities, failures and successes.
https://www.juedisches-museum-muenchen.de/en/exhibitions/the-last-europeans
Until December 31, 2022 at the Museo Padova della Ebraica
This exhibition sheds light on the life stories of Jewish doctors in Padua and the links between the University of Bo and the Jewish community. This is part of the 800-year anniversary of this prestigious institution. At first very open, welcoming Jewish students as early as 1500, the university managed to respond to the climate of intolerance when non-Catholic students were no longer allowed in, by granting them diplomas anyway. Nevertheless, following the promulgation of the ‘racial laws’, five Jewish professors were dismissed. Among them was Tullio Terni, director of the Institute of Anatomy in Padua, one of the fathers of modern embryology. It is to these hidden pages of history that the Padua event, sponsored by the municipality of Padua and Ucei, devotes four in-depth meetings.
Until Febreuary 26, 2023 at the PAFF of Pordenone
The PAFF! (Palazzo Arti Fumetto Friuli) hosts the first major exhibition in Italy dedicated to Will Eisner. The name of the exhibition refers to the comic strip that made him famous. Eisner, like Jean Gabin in France, had two great careers, celebrated by different generations who found in each of these moments different traits that made these geniuses appreciable.
Born in Brooklyn to Jewish parents who had immigrated from Romania and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Will Eisner (1917 – 2005) began his career as a comic book writer in the 1930s, and enjoyed success with the character of the Spirit, a cross between a detective and a superhero, a reference that has become a classic in the field. At the end of the 1970s, he returned in force with A Pact with God, the first graphic novel. A work that tells the story of Jewish life in New York at the beginning of the century and the various societal challenges and personal misfortunes. A work that is partly autobiographical.
The exhibition at the Villa di Parco Galvani in Pordenone traces Eisner’s career, presenting 180 originals, including final plates and sketches, and 126 period publications.
PAFF, Villa di Parco Galbani, Viale Dante, 33, 33170 Pordenone PN
At the Jewish Museum of London
“If you seek to learn, grow, pursue truth and find freedom, seek places that welcome argument and respect dissenting views.” Rabbi Jonathan Sacks
This phrase from the Chief Rabbi precedes the presentation of this concept, which is both traditional and so important in our contemporary world. These conversation rooms, a place that by definition is supposed to encourage them, regularly welcome audiences to exchange around a table and surrounded by various objects. Objects and themes that respond to and invite contemporary topics of conversation. Inspired by the Talmud, this approach is accompanied by testimonies and debates by rabbis over the centuries. For the first such event last month, three boxes of spices from Ukraine used during Havdalah are presented as an opening and inspiration for the discussions. The venue is open to the public from Sunday to Thursday.