
A dialogical tour leads through all the exhibition rooms and presents various objects of European remembrance. Between 1945 and 1948, exhibitions were set up in Europe to document the crimes of the Nazi regime.
Evidence of Nazi crimes was presented in London, Paris, Warsaw, Liberec and Bergen-Belsen, thus creating the first forms of historical reappraisal for a wider public.
The tour is dedicated to the different approaches of these early exhibitions and focuses, for example, on how the Jewish resistance was presented in Warsaw, which objects were shown or censored in the former Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, or how the Nazi crime scenes in Paris were partially reconstructed on site using original objects from the former Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp.
The influence of visual representations such as photographs and film footage on public memory is also reflected upon.
In dialog with the educational speakers, there will be room for discussion and reflection on the mechanisms of communicating history in the immediate post-war period in the three capital cities and two other significant perpetrator sites.
(IN GERMAN)
#80YearsEndOfWar
Additional information
Price info: Public guided tour (plus admission): 3,00 €
Price: €3.00
Price: €3.00