The idea to establish a Jewish Museum was voiced in 1971, the year in which Berlin's Jewish community commemorated its 300th anniversary. At the community's suggestion, the exhibition "Achievement and Destiny" was displayed in the Berlin Museum.
The "Association for a Jewish Museum" was founded in 1975. Towards the end of 1978, the Berlin Museum first displayed an exhibition of the new acquisitions for a future Jewish Museum. 1983 saw an historical exhibit on Berlin synagogues. From 1986 to 1998 three additional galleries were opened on the third floor of the Martin-Gropius-Bau (the former museum of design, now named after its architect).
For additional exhibition room in the Jewish Department of the Berlin Museum, it launched an architecture competition for an extension of the Berlin Museum. Competing against 165 other architects, Daniel Libeskind won the competition in June 1989. The foundation stone for the extension building was laid in November 1992 and the topping-out ceremony celebrated in May 1995. The Libeskind Building was finished in 1998.
The zinc-panelled Libeskind building is an unusual structure. It sets new architectural standards by creating a close relationship between the museum's themes and its architecture. The richly symbolic building visualizes German-Jewish history and appeals its visitor's senses and feelings. The tragic history of deported and murdered Jews and emigrants becomes as substantial as the vitality of contemporary Jewish life in Germany.
On 9 September, 2001, the opening of the museum with its exhibition "Two Millennia of German Jewish History" was celebrated with the German president and chancellor and a further 850 prominent guests from Germany and abroad.
The permanent exhibition of the Jewish Museum Berlin offers visitors a journey through German-Jewish history and culture, from its earliest testimonies, through the Middle Ages and up to the present. The Jewish Museum Berlin has proved to be a focal attraction with nearly 660.000 visitors in 2002 and just as many in 2003, making it one of Germany's most visited museums. Offering guided tours, temporary exhibitions, and a diverse calendar of events including scientific symposia, concerts, talks, workshops for kids and teens to name but a few, the museum has secured its reputation as a lively center for Jewish history and culture.
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Location: | Jewish Museum Berlin Lindenstraße 9-14, 10969 Berlin |
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Hours: | daily from 10 to 8, Mondays from 10 to 10 |
Phone: | +49-30-259 93 300 |