News
New Book from the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum
17-07-2004
Mauthausen Concentration Camp Records in the Auschwitz Museum Archives
16-07-2004
May 9 marked the 59th anniversary of the liberation of Mauthausen Concentration Camp by the US Army. About 200,000 people were imprisoned in Mauthausen and its several dozen sub-camps during the Second World War. Among them were some 50,000 Poles, mostly in Gusen, the largest of the sub-camps. The majority of them perished.
A Gallery of Camp Art in the Auschwitz Museum
14-07-2004
Preparatory work has begun on the adaptation of the Auschwitz kitchen building as a gallery of camp art. The building was not restored after the war and fell into ruin before being thoroughly renovated in 1961-1963. All those years ago, the work was justified on the grounds that “despite the high cost of the renovation, it would be inexcusable for this building to be lost, not only in view of its role in Auschwitz Concentration Camp, but also because it represents a huge exhibition space on one level.” After that renovation, however, the idea remained unrealized. The Museum adapted the building as workshops for carpenters, machinists, sheet-metal workers, and painters, and devoted part of it to facilities for renovation workers from the preservation department. The building has been empty since the opening in 2002 of the new preservation workshops in the visitor reception building.
Professional Development for the Museum Staff
12-07-2004
The year-long course in museum studies at the Jagiellonian University Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology Institute has ended. As has been the case over the several years that the course has been taught, Auschwitz-Museum Birkenau staff members attended. This time, there were eight of them.
Auschwitz in the Collective Awareness. A seminar in Oświęcim for Israeli educators
02-07-2004
In July, the Auschwitz Museum Education Center began its now-traditional two-week seminar on “Auschwitz in the Collective Awareness in Poland and Abroad.” Participants include staff from Holocaust remembrance institutions in Israel: Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, the Ghetto Fighters Museum from the kibbutz of the same name, and Massuah (The Lighthouse) from Tel Itzhak kibbutz.