Orlando Sentinel

Museums that explore European emigration

- Rick Steves Tribune Content Agency

Every year millions of Americans visit Ellis Island, where their ancestors may have arrived from “the old country.” But Europe has many excellent “Ellis Islands in reverse” — museums at the places where millions said goodbye to the land of their birth.

Is there anything more poignant than a person willing to sacrifice everything in pursuit of a better life? That’s the story of many hardscrabb­le Europeans heading off to dreamed-of opportunit­ies in far-off America. Others, who faced persecutio­n or even starvation, really had no choice — it was leave or die. Museums in Ireland, Belgium, Germany and Sweden — many just recently opened — tell some of these compelling stories.

On my most recent trip to Ireland, I checked out Dublin’s new interactiv­e exhibit called “Epic: The Irish Emigration Museum.” With so much anxiety surroundin­g immigratio­n in the United States today, it was thought-provoking to learn how many Americans were just as worried about Irish immigrants 160 years ago.

I had never fully appreciate­d the Irish diaspora until my recent visit. The Irish Emigration Museum celebrates how this little island has had an oversize impact on the world (an estimated 70 million people worldwide claim Irish heritage). The museum uses a hightech approach to explain the forces that scattered so many Irish around the globe. Historic photos of filthy tenements and early films of bustling urban scenes round out the plight of the common Irish emigrant.

The building is not far from the Jeanie Johnston Tall Ship and Famine Museum. This floating exhibit is housed in a replica of a real ship that made 16 eight-week trans-Atlantic crossings, carrying about 200 per voyage to their new lives after the Great Potato Famine of the 1840s.

On the continent, there are more places to learn about the plight of European emigrants, particular­ly the cutting-edge Red Star Line Museum, in Antwerp, Belgium. In late-19thcentur­y Europe, the Industrial Revolution and a tremendous population boom led to political instabilit­y and economic difficulti­es. During the great migration between 1873 and 1935, the Red Star shipping line brought some 2 million emigrants from Antwerp to New York City.

This was the exit point for people from all over Europe — especially Germany and Eastern Europe. Jews fleeing pogroms in Czarist Russia and later Nazi persecutio­n in Germany — among them Irving Berlin, Golda Meir and Albert Einstein — accounted for at least a quarter of the company’s passengers taken across the Atlantic. The 10-day steamer journey transporte­d cargo, luxury travelers and “steerage-class” peasants alike. Before boarding, emigrants underwent humiliatin­g health exams and nervously waited while clerks processed their paperwork.

The Red Star Line Museum fills the hall that processed many who passed through Antwerp on their way to a new life. The museum combines personal stories with high-tech presentati­ons to detail the “other end” of the Ellis Island experience. One powerful exhibit — using wraparound video screens — drives home the point that immigratio­n remains as common today as it was in the heyday of Ellis Island. Displays profile immigrants throughout history — from the first humans who left Africa in 40,000 B.C. to migrant workers of today.

In Hamburg, Germany, the engaging BallinStad­t Emigration Museum tells the story of those from Germany and beyond who went first to Hamburg, by train or even on foot, before boarding a ship to cross the ocean. Creative themed exhibits give a look at the origins of the 5 million German emigrants who passed through here, the reasons they chose to leave (from poverty to persecutio­n), their experience­s on the trans-Atlantic ships and their challenges forging a new life in the new land. It offers a dynamic and kidfriendl­y look at a powerful topic.

Finally, the House of Emigrants in Vaxjo, Sweden, is a fascinatin­g stop for anyone with Swedish ancestors. The inspiring “Dream of America” exhibit captures the experience­s of the 1.3 million Swedes who sought a better life in the American Promised Land in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Economic woes (and, much like in Ireland, a potato famine) wracked Sweden from the 1850s to the 1920s. Roughly 20 percent of the men and 15 percent of the women who were born in Sweden during the last half of the 19th century left the country. Rounding out the exhibit, homage is paid to prominent Swedish-Americans, including aviator Charles Lindbergh, union organizer Joe Hill and the second man on the moon, Buzz Aldrin.

With so many of us owing our lives to ancestors who risked theirs emigrating to the U.S., it’s important to learn about their epic journey. Adding a visit to an emigration museum in Europe can also give us greater understand­ing toward those currently seeking refuge on our own soil.

Rick Steves (www.rick

steves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@rick

steves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

 ?? RED STAR LINE MUSEUM ?? Emigrants at a dock in Antwerp, Belgium, en route to New York. Red Star was one of the biggest carriers on the Atlantic.
RED STAR LINE MUSEUM Emigrants at a dock in Antwerp, Belgium, en route to New York. Red Star was one of the biggest carriers on the Atlantic.
 ?? RICK STEVES' EUROPE ?? The Jeanie Johnston Tall Ship and Famine Museum in Dublin features a re-creation of living conditions in a replica of a ship that made many trans-Atlantic voyages.
RICK STEVES' EUROPE The Jeanie Johnston Tall Ship and Famine Museum in Dublin features a re-creation of living conditions in a replica of a ship that made many trans-Atlantic voyages.
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