Since the end of the Second World War,
its events have been commemorated in a constant succession of new
ways. Today, 65 years later, the Jewish Historical Museum and the
Hollandsche Schouwburg are opening the gates to the future with
three exceptional, innovative projects that provide digital access
to the past. On 15 September these projects will be presented at
the Hollandsche Schouwburg in Amsterdam.
A unique social network centred on the
Shoah
With more than 250,000 pages of information about Jewish
victims of the Shoah, the Digital Monument to the Jewish Community
in the Netherlands is a treasured place of commemoration. It has
now become the centre of the interactive Jewish Monument Community,
a social network of the victims' family members, neighbours, and
classmates, as well as researchers and students. On the website,
anyone can look up or contribute facts, photographs, stories, and
memories about the victims of the Shoah, building bridges between
the postwar generations and their forebears. The result is a living
community where the past and present meet. The Jewish
Monument Community is open to everyone.
Two monuments merge
At the Hollandsche
Schouwburg there is a wall of names, with all 6,700 family
names of the Jews from the Netherlands who were murdered during the
German occupation. The
ikPod, an iPod specially adapted by Mediamatic, links the names
on the wall to all the available information about all family
members on the Digital Monument website. Visitors can read the
names on the wall with the ikPod to learn the individual histories
behind them. Visitors to the wall of names can now see information
about family situations, addresses, and occupations, supplemented
with personal stories and more than 10,000 photographs and
documents. This makes the monument interactive and meets the
growing need for individual commemoration, in a fitting, dignified
manner.
5,000 hours of life stories from the Shoah Visual
History Archive, now available to visitors
With the help of 70 summarizers, the Jewish Historical
Museum has made 2,000 eyewitness testimonies from the Visual
History Archive of the USC Shoah Foundation Institute in Los
Angeles fully searchable. This is the largest oral history archive
on the Shoah in the Netherlands and can now be searched in its
entirety. The complete archive, assembled on the initiative of
Steven Spielberg, consists of nearly 52,000 interviews with
survivors of and eyewitnesses to the Shoah from all over the world.
From this archive, the Jewish Historical Museum selected 2,000
interviews related to the Netherlands. The interviews can be viewed
in the Hollandsche Schouwburg and the
Jewish Historical Museum.
For more information or images, please contact Annelie
Spaans, Marketing & Communication Department, Jewish Historical
Museum:
T +31 (0)20 5 310 372
E Communication
Department