Jewish Museum in Prague

Jewish Museum in Prague
Židovské muzeum v Praze

The Jewish Museum in Prague is housed in a functionalist building, which was a former hospital and Spanish Synagogue.
Established 1906 (1906)
Coordinates 50°05′25″N 14°25′16″E / 50.090336°N 14.421119°E / 50.090336; 14.421119Coordinates: 50°05′25″N 14°25′16″E / 50.090336°N 14.421119°E / 50.090336; 14.421119
Website http://www.jewishmuseum.cz/en/info/visit/

The Jewish Museum in Prague (Czech: Židovské muzeum v Praze) is a museum of Jewish heritage in the Czech Republic and one of the most visited museums in Prague.[1] Its collection of Judaica is one of the largest in the world, about 40,000 objects, 100,000 books, and a copious archive of Czech and Moravian Jewish community histories.

History

Foundation and development (1906–1939)

The Jewish Museum in Prague was founded in 1906 by historian Dr. Hugo Lieben (1881–1942) and Dr. Augustin Stein (1854–1937), who later became the head of the Prague Jewish Community.[2] Its purpose was to document history and customs of the Jewish population of the Czech lands, as well as to preserve artifacts from Prague synagogues demolished at the beginning of the 20th century.[3]

During Nazi occupation (1939–1945)

When the Nazis instituted the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in part of the former Czechoslovakia, the museum became the Central Bureau for Jewish Emigration. (Its name was later changed to the Central Bureau for Arrangement of the Jewish Question in Bohemia and Moravia.) Karel Stein (1906–1961), an employee of the Jewish community in Prague, suggested that properties of the community be stored in the museum. These properties were considered valuable works of art by Nazis and therefore acceptable for preservation. Because of the initiative of the Jewish community, many objects were collected, and the Museum was professionally led by Josef Polák.[4]

After the war (1945–1994)

Around 80 000 Czech and Moravian Jews fell victim to the Second World War and so afterwards there was almost nobody to claim the confiscated objects, preserved in the Museum. Endowed with a new vocation, ensuing from the historical fact of the Holocaust, the Museum re-established its activity on 13 May 1945, under the administration of Jewish Religious Communities Council and under the leadership of Hana Volavková. Its first exhibition after the War took place on 26 June 1945.

On 25 February 1948, after less than 3 years of post war freedom, the Communists staged a coup d'état and took over the government of Czechoslovakia. Out of the Communist regime’s initiative the Jewish Museum became state property on 4th April 1950 and its name was changed respectively to the State Jewish Museum. During the Communist dictatorship, until its very fall in November 1989, the raison d’être of the Museum was constantly disputed on ideological grounds. The topics seemingly related to the “campaign for peace and against fascism“ (favourite clichés of the Communists) were allowed. Nevertheless, pretensed campaign against another adversary, Zionism, restrained the functioning of the Museum nearly to the point of preclusion, regarding research, exhibiting, publishing and cooperation with foreign experts alike. Moreover, activity of the Museum was followed closely by the state organs. However, the concern of the state did not include conditions of the Museum collections and buildings.

After the Velvet Revolution, in 1994, the buildings used by the Museum, as well as the Old Jewish Cemetery, returned to possession of the Jewish Community of Prague and the Museum's collections were restituted to the Federation of Jewish Communities as the legal successor of the ceased Jewish Communities. In the same year Mr. Leo Pavlát became the director of the successively re-established Jewish Museum in Prague.

In the present

Currently, administrative activity of the Museum includes:

In these buildings of considerable historical value the Museum lets its visitors explore the actual as well as the spiritual history of the Czech Jews through exhibition of artefacts from its collection. This is unique among collections of other museums of Jewish heritage, as it comprises the whole area of the Czech lands. The singular collection was not harmed even during the floods in 2002, although the buildings, especially the Pinkas Synagogue, received significant damage.

In February 2014 a new Information and Reservation Centre was opened.[5]

Books

References

  1. "Návštěvnost muzeí a galerií v krajích ČR v roce 2012" (PDF). Centrum informací a statistik kultury. 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  2. Veselská, Magda (2012). Archa paměti: Cesta pražského židovského muzea pohnutým 20. stoletím. Praha: Academia a Židovské muzeum v Praze.
  3. "History of the Museum". Jewish Museum in Prague. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  4. Museum website
  5. "Information and Reservation Centre". Jewish Museum in Prague. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
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