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Essential
Architecture- Washington D.C.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |
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architect
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James Ingo Freed, FAIA, Pei Cobb Freed & Partners |
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location
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Washington, DC |
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date
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1993 |
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style
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Postmodern |
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construction
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stone cladding |
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type
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museum |
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Interior of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Exterior of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum viewed
from Raoul Wallenberg Place (15th St. SW.)
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is a national
institution situated in a prominent location adjacent to The National
Mall in Washington, DC (in between 14th and 15th streets SW); however,
it is not a constituent institution of the Smithsonian Institution. The
museum is dedicated to documenting, studying, and interpreting the
history of the Holocaust. It also serves as the United States' official
memorial to the millions of European Jews and others killed during the
Holocaust under directives of Nazi Germany. While the United States
government provided some funding for both the building and continued
operations of the museum, a majority of the funding comes from private
sources, Jewish movie director Steven Spielberg being amongst the most
notable donors. The street that the museum is located on is named Raoul
Wallenberg Place, after the Swedish diplomat who is believed to have
saved 100,000 Jews in Hungary during the Second World War. The museum
building sits on land that previously belonged to the United States
Department of Agriculture. Two of the three annex buildings that sat on
this property were demolished to build a museum whose design would be
wholly about the Holocaust.
The US Congress authorized the creation of the museum in 1980,
based on the 1979 report of the President's Commission on the Holocaust,
established by Jimmy Carter. The museum was charged with maintaining a
Committee on Conscience, to monitor and issue an "'institutional scream'
to alert the conscience of the world and spark public outcry" at the
earliest signs of genocidal intent.
The building was designed by James Ingo Freed, of Pei Cobb Freed
& Partners. Additionally, Maurice N Finegold, FAIA, of Finegold
Alexander + Associates Inc, was a consulting architect on the project.
Though the building on the outside is rather monumental with clean
lines, in keeping with the large governmental buildings in the immediate
context, the interior was meant to provoke more intimate and visceral
responses.
The facilities house a number of exhibitions, artworks,
publications, and artifacts relating to the Holocaust. The museum
collects and preserves material evidence, distributes educational
materials, and produces public programming. The Holocaust Museum also
holds annual Holocaust commemorations and remembrances.
[edit] The Permanent Exhibition
The Permanent Exhibition at the museum is a
chronological history of the Holocaust. It begins in 1933 with Adolf
Hitler's rise to power, and ends with the liberation of the Camps, and
the opening of Israel. The exhibition is broken up into three floors
covering different years. The fourth floor (the beginning of the
exhibition) covers the years 1933 to 1939 focusing on the exclusion of
Jews from society and the buildup to the Second World War ending with
the invasion of Poland by Germany. The third floor covers the years 1940
to 1945 focusing on the Concentration Camps, Killing Centers, and
Ghettos. The second floor focuses on resistance, rescue, and liberation,
and the post-war years. At the end of the exhibition there is a
testimony film of Holocaust survivors that runs continuously.
The Tower of Faces is part of the permanent exhibition of the
museum. It forms a three-story tower within the building, and is lined
with about one thousand photographs of everyday life before the
Holocaust in the small Lithuanian shtetl (village) of Eisiskes. There
are photographs of family groups, weddings, picnics, swimming parties,
sporting events, holiday celebrations, gardening, bicycling and other
aspects of daily life. Before the war, the shtetl population was about
3,500, almost all Jewish. In September 1941, German SS, assisted by
Lithuanian auxiliaries, rounded up the people of the shtetl, along with
about one thousand Jews from the surrounding area, and systematically
killed them all.
The photographs were taken by Yitzhak Uri Katz and his
associates. They are part of the Yaffa Eliach Shtetl Collection. Dr.
Eliach lived in Eisiskes as a young child, and is the granddaughter of
Yitzhak Uri Katz. [1]
The museum also includes the Registry of Jewish Holocaust
Survivors, a database of survivors and their families. Established to
assist survivors and their families in their search for relatives and
friends, the Registry now contains information on approximately 195,000
survivors and their families worldwide. The Registry is named after
Benjamin and Vladka Meed, founder of the American Gathering of Jewish
Holocaust Survivors.
To enter the Permanent Exhibition, visitors must acquire a free
timed pass. The passes are available from the museum on the day of your
visit or online for a service fee.
[edit] Criticism of the Museum
The museum has been criticized by German writer Matthias
Hass for recontextualizing the Holocaust in terms of American values.[2]
The entrance to the museum is adorned with quotations from George
Washington and the Declaration of Independence, and the exhibitions are
filled with references to American values.[3] Hass argues that by
transporting the events of the Holocaust from a European to an American
context, "the perception of them is fundamentally altered" and the
Museum ends up exploiting the very history it is trying to preserve. [4]
[edit] The Committee on Conscience
Additionally, the museum houses the offices of the
Committee on Conscience[1], a joint governmentally and privately funded
think tank, which by Presidential mandate engages in genocide research
in all areas of the world. Recently, it has established itself as a
leading non-partisan commenter on the Darfur Genocide in the nation of
Sudan, as well as on the war-torn region of Chechnya in Russia, a zone
which the Committee believes has the capacity to produce genocidal
atrocities. However, the committee does not have policy-making powers,
and serves solely as an advisorial institution to the United States
government and those of other nations who seek its services.
[edit] The Genocide Prevention Mapping Initiative

The dedication plaque outside the museum.
The Genocide Prevention Mapping Initiative seeks to collect,
share and visually present to the world critical information on emerging
crises that may lead to genocide or related crimes against humanity.[5]
The first mapping initiative - undertaken jointly with Google
Earth - focused on the Darfur Conflict. [6] Beginning with Darfur, the
museum wants to build an interactive “global crisis map" - a new tool to
share and understand information quickly, to "see the situation",
enabling more effective prevention and response.[7]
[edit] See also

A panoramic view of the Hall of Remembrance
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The museum also includes "Daniel's Story," a walk through of the
fictional trials and tribulations that Daniel had gone through. Although
the story was fictional, facts from other Holocaust survivor stories
were included. This area was meant to be visited by the children. It is
suggested that children under 11 do not visit the permanent exhibition.
On the first floor of the museum, a model of what the ghettos may
have looked like are present. The presented ghetto model is life
size.[citation needed]
[edit] Further reading
Berenbaum, Michael, The World Must Know: The History of
the Holocaust as told in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,
Little Brown and Company, Boston New York London 1993.
Freed, James Ingo, "The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,"
Assemblage 9 (June 1989), 58-79.
Ochsner, Jeffrey Karl, "Understanding the Holocaust through the
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum," JAE: Journal of Architectural Education
48 (May 1995), 240-249.
Sorkin, Michael, "The Holocaust Museum: Between Beauty and
Horror," Progressive Architecture 74 (February 1993).
Young, James E., The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials and
Meaning, Yale University Press, New Haven and London 1993.
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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