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Though by no means as elaborate as the major Holocaust museums in Washington and Berlin, the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre and Museum was founded in the 1970's and predates them both by decades.
Moreover, as a community-run institution still staffed and hosted largely by Holocaust survivors, the experience at the MHMC is much more personal and intimate, exploring the effects of one of history's greatest crimes on families and individuals.
Located on the ground floor of Cummings House, the multi-story headquarters of the Montreal Jewish Community Campus, the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Museum tells the story of Jewish communities before, during and after the Holocaust. Through the life stories of Montreal survivors, the Museum invites visitors to reflect on the destruction caused by prejudice, racism and antisemitism.
The permanent exhibition includes: Life Before the War and the Holocaust. Here we learn about the customs, holidays, and the cultural diversity of Jewish communities in Europe and North Africa. Visitors learn about the rise of Nazism and escalating discriminatory policies imposed against Jews in Germany up until the attacks on the Night of Broken Glass, Kristallnacht. The Implementation of the Holocaust during World War II: the ghettos, mobile killing units, and camps. After the War: liberation, displaced persons camps and immigration problems faced by survivors. The reaction of Quebec and of Canada is regularly examined in relation to these events throughout the exhibition. Archives and artefacts document, for example, antisemitism during the 1930s and after the war when survivors immigrated to Montreal.
Archived photographs and videos give visitors a perspective on the political and cultural context in which the Holocaust took place. Each historical section is highlighted by survivor testimonies, compiled in videos that mix archival footage and interviews. Here we learn about the crimes and violence perpetrated against Jews, but also about resistance and the struggle for dignity. estimonies add a human dimension and sensitive presentation of the difficult history. Through the diversity of experiences shared in the Montreal Holocaust Museum, visitors get a sense of the complexity and scale of the Holocaust.
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