Borough Park, NY – 9/11 Museum Designer Brings His Expertise To Brooklyn’s Orthodox New Holocaust Education Center

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    Rendering of Brooklyn’s first Holocaust museum which will be located in Borough Park. Photo: Kleinman Family CenterBorough Park, NY – In anticipation of its opening next spring on Borough Park’s 50th Street, The Kleinman Family Holocaust Education Center has hired the same designer who produced exhibits in the National September 11th Memorial & Museum.

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    The Daily News reports (http://nydn.us/QGJ2CH) that designer David Layman is in the process of collecting historical pieces from World War II, such as photos, important documents, Torah scrolls, books, and religious items like prayer shawls, and determining how and where these artifacts will be displayed in the Center.

    “Our design approach is telling the story through the eyes of the people themselves,” Layman told the Daily News. The Brooklyn community is featured prominently. The artifacts, photos, and papers are primarily from Borough Park.”
    Layman added that his work on this project is similar to that of the 9/11 museum, explaining, “Both stories are very similar. They are both events that changed humanity forever.”

    The Kleinman Family Holocaust Education Center, a four-story structure, consists of a research library, a museum, and an interview room where survivors can record testimony about their experiences. At the heart of the Center is the story of Orthodox Jewish life prior to, throughout, and following the war. It is the first Holocaust museum which highlights the unique struggles of Orthodox Jewry during World War II. Also on display will be rabbinical rulings issued in the 1940s pertaining to laws of kashrut, specifically, whether or not starving Jews in the Nazi ghettos were permitted to eat non-kosher food.

    “Jewish children in Brooklyn aren’t getting much exposure to the Holocaust,” said Rabbi Sholom Friedman, who directs the Center. “A museum in such a Jewish heavy area makes sense. The Orthodox were singled out. They were more noticeably Jewish.”

    To date, some of the artifacts donated by survivors have included one of the last German visas to be issued in 1939 and a marriage certificate signed at a displacement camp in Landsberg, Germany in 1945.

    The Center is currently asking City families to donate photos, documents, and other sacred objects from the World War II era. Brooklyn is home to approximately 9,000 Holocaust survivors, the largest contingent outside of Israel.


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    8 Comments
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    Isaid
    Isaid
    11 years ago

    Where will it be located, 50th st. And what avenue?

    Pereles
    Pereles
    11 years ago

    My parents also got married in Landsberg….can’t wait to visit the museum IYH

    J-R-S
    J-R-S
    11 years ago

    It would be good if the point will turn out to be educating the chassidish/orthodox children of the area about something they’re not [currently] sufficiently taught: the Holocaust, which was done to Jews….
    …..Not turning it all into a big lesson on how ‘we orthodox Jews’ were singled out and orthodox Jews suffered the most.
    That’s not what’s needed.

    Good luck.

    sissel613
    sissel613
    11 years ago

    My parents were married at the Landsberg DP camp in 1946 and my older brother was born there as well until they came to good ol’ USA in 1949. It is wonderful that we will have this museum focused more on the religious side of the Holocaust. Rabbi Friedman is right. The frum community were the first to be killed/rounded up because they were more conspicuously Jewish. May those who survived, including my mother od meah viesrim, still find some solace.

    Erlich
    Erlich
    11 years ago

    Kol HaKavod to Kleinman family. Remember what Amalek did to you. Never forget!!!