The Japan Times - Museums rethink how the Holocaust should be shown

EUR -
AED 4.158787
AFN 80.192306
ALL 97.933102
AMD 440.389106
ANG 2.040648
AOA 1036.011635
ARS 1360.986002
AUD 1.752442
AWG 2.040886
AZN 1.921946
BAM 1.954803
BBD 2.285695
BDT 137.539883
BGN 1.95591
BHD 0.426758
BIF 3367.472514
BMD 1.132253
BND 1.460214
BOB 7.85124
BRL 6.456217
BSD 1.132053
BTN 95.49427
BWP 15.350649
BYN 3.704759
BYR 22192.15462
BZD 2.274011
CAD 1.56286
CDF 3252.961886
CHF 0.934624
CLF 0.027797
CLP 1066.763048
CNY 8.232893
CNH 8.164126
COP 4864.916581
CRC 572.723205
CUC 1.132253
CUP 30.004699
CVE 110.208816
CZK 24.954295
DJF 201.593461
DKK 7.461036
DOP 66.626035
DZD 150.164153
EGP 57.345272
ERN 16.983792
ETB 151.127028
FJD 2.554254
FKP 0.852479
GBP 0.846908
GEL 3.102686
GGP 0.852479
GHS 15.254695
GIP 0.852479
GMD 80.956214
GNF 9805.00149
GTQ 8.714904
GYD 236.846579
HKD 8.775067
HNL 29.399013
HRK 7.532652
HTG 147.960451
HUF 405.112092
IDR 18584.231115
ILS 4.095783
IMP 0.852479
INR 95.531734
IQD 1482.944007
IRR 47681.997427
ISK 146.705721
JEP 0.852479
JMD 179.38568
JOD 0.803105
JPY 161.772898
KES 146.332281
KGS 99.015395
KHR 4533.868864
KMF 491.960772
KPW 1019.008063
KRW 1563.618836
KWD 0.34708
KYD 0.943448
KZT 582.498481
LAK 24478.277842
LBP 101432.426037
LKR 339.05063
LRD 226.411576
LSL 20.667785
LTL 3.343248
LVL 0.684888
LYD 6.201085
MAD 10.458584
MDL 19.397711
MGA 4985.61249
MKD 61.479495
MMK 2377.356913
MNT 4047.68603
MOP 9.036273
MRU 44.795164
MUR 51.393344
MVR 17.435314
MWK 1962.959978
MXN 22.324526
MYR 4.792264
MZN 72.407681
NAD 20.666964
NGN 1818.734618
NIO 41.660418
NOK 11.704369
NPR 152.790157
NZD 1.892878
OMR 0.435923
PAB 1.132058
PEN 4.14905
PGK 4.626641
PHP 63.019495
PKR 318.450713
PLN 4.275078
PYG 9063.379563
QAR 4.131167
RON 5.083586
RSD 117.173371
RUB 91.712481
RWF 1607.530186
SAR 4.246842
SBD 9.475085
SCR 16.212414
SDG 679.914595
SEK 10.891591
SGD 1.459876
SHP 0.889773
SLE 25.758315
SLL 23742.756426
SOS 646.987314
SRD 41.723201
STD 23435.346677
SVC 9.904951
SYP 14721.495887
SZL 20.670284
THB 36.953904
TJS 11.745076
TMT 3.962885
TND 3.396304
TOP 2.651843
TRY 43.708583
TTD 7.672326
TWD 34.0893
TZS 3051.421201
UAH 46.903989
UGX 4140.889009
USD 1.132253
UYU 47.486631
UZS 14646.791904
VES 100.330652
VND 29397.245229
VUV 136.667081
WST 3.132114
XAF 655.648814
XAG 0.034211
XAU 0.000335
XCD 3.05997
XDR 0.817101
XOF 655.648814
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.892727
ZAR 20.675559
ZMK 10191.637231
ZMW 30.594349
ZWL 364.584935
  • CMSC

    0.0300

    22.05

    +0.14%

  • RIO

    0.1750

    59.745

    +0.29%

  • SCS

    -0.0650

    9.905

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0150

    13.035

    -0.12%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    44.21

    +1.04%

  • BCC

    -6.3200

    86.15

    -7.34%

  • RBGPF

    3.2400

    66.24

    +4.89%

  • NGG

    0.5500

    72.39

    +0.76%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.23

    -0.13%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    10.45

    +0.29%

  • BP

    -0.6410

    28.539

    -2.25%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    21.76

    +1.7%

  • GSK

    -0.0050

    38.845

    -0.01%

  • VOD

    0.0850

    9.685

    +0.88%

  • RELX

    -0.0300

    55.01

    -0.05%

  • AZN

    -0.8750

    71.215

    -1.23%

Museums rethink how the Holocaust should be shown
Museums rethink how the Holocaust should be shown / Photo: LOU BENOIST - AFP

Museums rethink how the Holocaust should be shown

Historians are rethinking the way the Holocaust is being presented in museums as the world marks the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the last Nazi concentration camps this month.

Text size:

Shocking images of the mass killings of Jews were "used massively at the end of World War II to show the violence of the Nazis," historian Tal Bruttmann, a specialist on the Holocaust, told AFP.

But in doing so "we kind of lost sight of the fact that is not normal to show" such graphic scenes of mass murder, of people being humiliated and dehumanised, he said.

Up to this year, visitors to the Memorial de Caen war museum in northern France were plunged into darkened rooms with life-sized photographs showing the horror of what happened in the camps and the mass executions earlier in the war.

"The previous generation of Holocaust museums used these images because it reinforces the horror," said James Bulgin, who is in charge of the Holocaust galleries at London's Imperial War Museum.

The difficulty with that is that it "denies the people within the images any capacity for agency or respect or identity," he added.

"The other problem with Holocaust narratives is that they tend to relate the history of what the Nazis and their collaborators did, not what Jewish people experienced," argued the British historian.

Some six million were murdered in the Nazi's attempt to wipe out European Jews.

- 'No photos of killings' -

Which is why "there are no photographs of killings" in the new, "almost clinically white" galleries dedicated to the Shoah at the Memorial de Caen, said Bruttmann, the scientific adviser on the project which opened this month.

"To show this absolute negation of human beings, there is no obligation to show images of such unprecedented violence," said the memorial's director Kleber Arhoul.

Historians at the Imperial War Museum had the same debate, but drew different conclusions.

They decided to still use graphic imagery. "The images exist as part of the historical record, we can't suppress their existence," said Bulgin. "But what we can do is meaningfully integrate them into the historical narrative."

He said they did consider not using them but felt it could lead to misinformation. "All of that stuff exists on YouTube and Vimeo... but without us mediating it, shaping it, informing it, giving it context," he added.

The curator said they "spoke to an enormous range" of Jewish groups and the "almost overwhelming consensus was that we should use the footage".

However, graphic images of the genocide are shown in smaller formats, often on panels that carry a warning and that you have to turn over to see. Distinctions are also made between photos taken by Jews themselves and those taken by the Nazis in the Warsaw ghetto.

Israeli historian Robert Rozett argued that "we need these memorials to be aware of what human beings are capable of, and where open hatred can lead."

At the Yad Vashem memorial in Jerusalem, "there are pictures that show mass executions. They are not gigantic but they are there," he said.

"The hardest pictures are not highlighted in any way," he said. For example, those showing the massacre of Babi Yar, near Kyiv, in 1941 do not show the moment of the killings but the aftermath. And those of the mass graves do not show the bodies but the clothes of the victims strewn on the ground.

- 'You want them to identify' -

Museums have also tended to concentrate on representing the ruthless, systematic efficiency of the Nazi death machine, experts say.

The first Holocaust memorials were "dark, oppressive spaces with a highly industrialised architecture that very much centres on Auschwitz," Bulgin said.

That was "enormously problematic and potentially slightly dangerous, because it has none of the human character that actually allowed it to happen."

Which is why the London museum has tried to concentrate on this being a genocide "done by people, to people", he said.

The new galleries in the Memorial de Caen have two distinct rooms. One on death camps like Auschwitz, the mass executions of the "Holocaust by bullets" and the mobile gas vans. The other deals with the concentration and work camps where prisoners were enslaved, brutalised and worked to death or died from hunger or disease.

But museums also have a duty to evoke the Jewish communities that were wiped out, Rozett insisted. "If you're teaching the Holocaust, you have to talk about what happened before, about what was destroyed," he said.

The first Holocaust room at the Imperial War Museum addresses this by showing a film called "The Presence of Absence". At Yad Vashem, the visit begins with a sound and light show to draw people deep into those lost worlds.

"When you're teaching, you want somebody's mind and their heart," it says. "You want them to identify. It's not enough just intellectual engagement. There has to be something emotional, but not overriding emotional."

T.Sato--JT