A very distinctive Jewish museum in Germany, this museum is very unique, the museum here is also very good, there are a lot of things in the whole area, the museum is also very fun facilities, when you come here to play, you can see a lot of people.
MoreThe Jewish Museum is located in the Rothschild Palace, named after the well-known Jewish banker Rothschild. The museum opened on November 9, 1988, exactly 50 years after the tragic "Crystal Night" when Jews were brutally murdered by the Germans.
A very distinctive Jewish museum in Germany, this museum is very unique, the museum here is also very good, there are a lot of things in the whole area, the museum is also very fun facilities, when you come here to play, you can see a lot of people.
Excellent museum with a large range of exhibits, and the staff which some are Holocaust survivors were very helpful. A lot of students on excursions. Very moving stories and a in depth historical journey of the events of the Holocaust and experiences of the Jewish people. If you’re interested in WW2, this museum is a must see
The Jewish Museum, located at the junction of Fifth Avenue and 92nd Street in Berlin, Germany, was built from 1993 to 1995 to commemorate the six million Jews who died in the Third Reich and has a history of Jews in Germany for nearly two thousand years.
The most shocking place in the museum is the "Holocaust Tower" at the bottom of the corridor, and the one is 15 meters high, but it is rare to see light. The ground is full of flaky metal sculptures. Pushing open the unusually heavy iron gate and entering the Tower of the Holocaust, the moment the door closed, except for a little light above the head, all around it was dark. If not for other visitors, even the sound disappeared in the space. Just stay for a few tens of seconds, look up at the faint light above your head, and soon you will be breathless by silence and darkness. As for the exhibition room with thousands of metal faces, it is even more depressing and scary to say. I read some introductions that visitors can "go" up to experience the pain of being trampled underfoot by Jews. But I really don't have the courage to watch for a minute, and I feel like I can hear the cry of the victims, let alone actually go up.
Germans have a sense of original sin for Jews, which introduces the establishment and end of the Jewish settlement in Frankfurt, the struggles of centuries for integration, and the rebirth of the postwar Jews.