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Imperial War Museum London >> Holocaust Exhibition |
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Under the cover of the Second World War, for the first time in history, industrial methods were used for the mass extermination of a whole people.
Taking as its starting point the turbulent political scene in Europe immediately after the First World War, the exhibition traces the rise of the Nazi party, how antisemitism as a Europe-wide phenomenon made a fertile seedbed for Hitler's anti-Jewish beliefs, the perversion of science to support Nazi race theory, the isolation of German Jews, the refugee crisis and the advent of so-called 'Euthanasia' policies in 1939. Photographs, documents, newspapers, artefacts, posters and film offer stark evidence of persecution and slaughter, collaboration and resistance.
Contrasting with the story of industrialised murder is that of the men, women and children who endured Nazi policies and in most cases died as a result of them. Toys, diaries, photograph albums, story books, hand-made mementos - these remnants show individual efforts at survival, while the testimony of eighteen survivors of the Holocaust brings a fresh and haunting perspective to the narrative; how families responded to the direst circumstances; the resilience and luck which allowed some to survive. The Holocaust Exhibition is not recommended for children under 14.
To discuss any exhibition-related enquiries please contact: Hazel Brown, Research Assistant
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