The Jewish Chronicle

Italian Judaism museum set to open

- BY JULIE CARBONARA

MORE THAN 2,200 years of Jewish history in Italy will be showcased from next month in a new, landmark museum in the town of Ferrara.

The Museum of Italian Judaism and the Shoah will open on December 13, in a north Italian town that may lack the instantly recognisab­le glamour of Rome or Venice, but has an associatio­n with the Jews going back over a thousand years.

It is the ideal location for a museum whose purpose is to tell the story of the uninterrup­ted presence of the Jews in Italy and the vital role they have played in the country’s developmen­t.

“In today’s world, characteri­sed by multi-identities, the Jewish experience maybe can serve as an inspiratio­n,” said Simonetta Della Seta, director of the museum, which is known by its Italian initials MEIS. The opening exhibition will show visitors that Italy was built “with the Jews and also by the Jews”, reinforcin­g the message that before the Lombards, Normans and the Spaniards arrived in the peninsula, the Jews were already there – and were already Italians. Tracing a route from Jerusalem to Rome, the exhibits show how Jews settled across the whole peninsula and how they succeeded in keeping their heritage alive while maintainin­g a dialogue with the society around them. The permanent multimedia show, Through the Eyes of the Italian Jew, aims “to involve the public in the themes that will be explored in greater depth in the MEIS itself,” Ms Della Seta explained.

It is a 24-minute immersive experience that reconstruc­ts the past for visitors through artwork, maps, documents and video inserts and features the voices of Italian Jews of times gone past. They include a Jew deported to Rome after

the destructio­n of Jerusalem, a Jewish scribe in twelfth century Palermo, a money-lender during the Renaissanc­e and a Jewish girl expelled from school in 1938 because of the racial laws.

MEIS was establishe­d through a law passed by Italy’s parliament in 2006. With support from the culture ministry and the Associatio­n of Italian Jewish

Communitie­s, the building that once hosted Ferrara’s old prison was secured for the museum that is set to open.

It proved to be an ideal location, a stone’s throw from the old Jewish quarter; the challenge was to transform a place of confinemen­t into one of openness and welcome, a place of memories

but also a place of life.

The project involved plenty of demolition and constructi­on and, as it will be built in stages, is not yet complete.

The finished product will comprise five “volumes”, symbolisin­g the five books of the Torah, and will house a restaurant, an auditorium and exhibition­s spaces.

 ??  ?? When completed, the ‘five volume’ museum will resemble the five books of the Torah
When completed, the ‘five volume’ museum will resemble the five books of the Torah
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