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Jewish museum in Austria exhibits anti-Semitic objects to provoke debate
web.israelinsider.com ^ | December 14, 2005

Posted on 12/14/2005 5:21:30 AM PST by Esther Ruth

Jewish museum in Austria exhibits anti-Semitic objects to provoke debate December 14, 2005

Curator Hanno Loewy explains a painting showing a fairground shooting stand depicting a Jew and a ferocious dog, which is part of an exhibit on anti-Semitic items at the Jewish Museum in Hohenems, western Austria. (AP)

The exhibit in the basement of the Jewish museum has the feel of a cozy antique shop or an old-fashioned apartment.

But a closer look at the paintings, paperweights, pipes and other knickknacks reveals something chilling: They are all anti-Semitic.

Curator Hanno Loewy went for the comfortable, homey look with a purpose - to unsettle visitors and get them thinking.

"These objects were part of a certain coziness. They were meant to be cozy," he said. "It takes three to five minutes, and then people realize it's not cozy at all. The disturbance they feel when they realize that themselves is much more effective than if we were to put up a sign saying, 'This is dangerous."'

On display are 580 objects from the collection of Gideon Finkelstein, a Jew who bought anti-Semitic items over 15 years.

Though the objects dating from 1880 to 1920 are nothing more than "kitschy knickknacks," they were a way for their original owners to exert power over Jews, whom they perceived as threatening, Loewy said.

"They are in a way transforming a fantasy of something dangerous into something you could control," he said.

Among the most eye-catching displays is a fairground shooting stand depicting a Jew and a ferocious dog. By hitting the target, shooters set off a mechanism that sets the dog on the Jew, who uses an umbrella in an attempt to fend off the attack.

In a separate room, visitors can listen to an interview in which Finkelstein says he considers it important to save these items because they show just how widespread anti-Semitism was long before Nazi leader Adolf Hitler rose to power.

"In the 80 years before Hitler, people in Germany, in Austria, in France, lived with anti-Semitism in their everyday lives," Finkelstein says in the presentation. "When someone like Hitler came and brought anti-Semitism to a climax, everything was already prepared. And I think it's important to show that."

The exhibit, which runs through Feb. 26, is the first public display of the Finkelstein collection. In his interview for museum visitors, Finkelstein says modern anti-Semitism is expressed in other forms.

"Today, there are books, there is the Internet, there are many other ways to disseminate propaganda like this," he warns.

Such means are explored in another exhibit room, dubbed the "Rumor Kitchen." Visitors open cupboards and drawers to find mini-exhibits illustrating modern anti-Semitism.

One cupboard is devoted to Mel Gibson's film "The Passion of the Christ," which some Jewish organizations objected to for fear it would cause bad blood between Christians and Jews.

Another drawer, labeled "Remove the cover! What teachers don't like to hear," contains a copy of a note with anti-Semitic jokes recently passed around among girls in a nearby school.

Scribbled in childish handwriting are statements such as: "When something doesn't suit us Nazis, a Jew will be gassed!" followed by a smiley face.

A Jewish heritage museum might be expected to avoid this subject in fear of conveying a message that promotes rather than criticizes anti-Semitism. But to Loewy, anti-Semitism is a topic "Jewish museums can't avoid if you don't merely present a Judaica silver collection, and I don't want to do that."

"It doesn't help to stick the head into the sand and pretend that this is not around," he said. In 1860, Hohenems, a town of 14,000 people near Austria's western border with Switzerland, had a vibrant Jewish community of 560. Today, only Loewy and a handful of other Jews live here.

The town has an unusual relationship to its Jewish roots because its Jewish community had largely dissolved before World War II.

That means the Holocaust is not "the overshadowing one aspect of history that dominates everything else," said Loewy, who moved to the town from Frankfurt, Germany, in 2004.

"Hohenems has a more positive connotation to the descendants than other German or Austrian or Polish places do," he said. "This is a factor that makes it easier to make interesting projects here."

American descendants of Hohenems' Jews have formed a 150-member group that supports the museum.

Uri Taenzer of Moorestown, New Jersey, secretary-treasurer of the American Friends of the Jewish Museum Hohenems, praised the exhibit, saying it combats anti-Semitism by "exposing and demonstrating some of this stupidity that gave rise to anti-Semitism."

"If the exhibit reminds people of how ignorant anti-Semitism can be, then it helps," he said in a telephone interview.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antisemitic; austria; exhibits; jewish; museum

1 posted on 12/14/2005 5:21:31 AM PST by Esther Ruth
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To: Esther Ruth

2 posted on 12/14/2005 5:23:00 AM PST by Esther Ruth (I have loved thee with an EVERLASTING LOVE, Jeremiah 31:3 Genesis 12:1-3 ***ZECH 12:3)
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To: Esther Ruth

I'm torn on this one ... it's almost as if many in the Jewish community view themselves as nothing more than perpetual victims.


3 posted on 12/14/2005 5:23:40 AM PST by mcg2000 (New Orleans: The city that declared Jihad against The Red Cross.)
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To: SJackson; Alouette


4 posted on 12/14/2005 5:23:49 AM PST by Esther Ruth (I have loved thee with an EVERLASTING LOVE, Jeremiah 31:3 Genesis 12:1-3 ***ZECH 12:3)
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To: Esther Ruth
Wonder if the koran is in this museum...
5 posted on 12/14/2005 5:27:16 AM PST by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - They want to die for Islam, and we want to kill them.)
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To: mcg2000

you make an interesting comment. imo, focusing soley on hitler and the third reich is one of the biggest mistakes humanity could have made. the curator is correct in saying that anti semitism was very robust way before hitler showed up, he merely sealed the deal with reality. look at the un today, nobody named hitler works there, but i cannot imagine a more anti semitic place, can you? by overwhelmingly focusing on hitler, myriad other threats have been allowed to flourish and very shortly we will have to deal with them or once again see mans favorite pastime commence again, namely, mans inhumanity to man.


6 posted on 12/14/2005 5:30:13 AM PST by son of caesar (son of caesar)
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To: son of caesar

I think you nailed it.


7 posted on 12/14/2005 5:39:30 AM PST by satchmodog9 ( Seventy million spent on the lefts Christmas present and all they got was a Scooter)
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
If you'd like to be on this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.

..........................................

8 posted on 12/14/2005 5:40:23 AM PST by SJackson (There's no such thing as too late, that's why they invented death. Walter Matthau)
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To: son of caesar
I agree that we focus too closely on "Hitler" and have ignored antisemitism in our midst. Similarly, other horrors have been ignored.

Joseph Stalin murdered many more people than Adolph Hitler, yet he is not considered the same sort of butcher/enslaver.

Michael Savage is one of the few saying that antisemitic Nazism has found a safe home in Iran. I think that it is improper to label radical Islam "Islamofascism". Islam contains its own political system (is it "fascism"?). It DOES share straits with Nazism (including a racial/ideological supremacist philosophy, antisemitism, tolerance for extreme violence and mutilation of those outside the group, propaganda, lies, and distortions...).

I don't believe that every muslim is an Islamonazi but then Stalin's useful idiots, the red dupes in America, were clueless as to who they served as well.
9 posted on 12/14/2005 6:06:41 AM PST by weegee (Christmas - the holiday that dare not speak its name.)
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To: Esther Ruth

Never heard of Hohenems before but just found it on the map...it is practically on the western border of Austria in the province of Voralberg, northeast of Liechtenstein and near the eastern end of Lake Constance.


10 posted on 12/14/2005 7:39:11 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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