The Jerusalem Post

National Museum of Italian Judaism, Shoah opens in Italy

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FERRARA (JTA) – Italy received a Hanukka present – the opening of a national Jewish museum.

The National Museum of Italian Judaism and the Shoah, MEIS, opened on Wednesday with an inaugural temporary exhibit called “Jews, an Italian Story: The First Thousand Years” that illustrate­s the history of Jewish presence in Italy from ancient Roman times until the Middle Ages.

The exhibit, which will run until September 16, 2018, is the first step in a multi-year program of exhibits and events that will culminate in the final form of the museum and its permanent core exhibit, expected in late 2020.

MEIS is located in a complex of buildings that once housed a prison in Ferrara, a historic town in northeast Italy between Venice and Bologna that has a Jewish history dating back to early medieval times.

Italian President Sergio Mattarella and other dignitarie­s attended the inaugurati­on ceremony on Wednesday, including Culture Minister Dario Franceschi­ni, who is from Ferrara and has been a longtime supporter of the project.

“With this exhibition, a dream has been achieved and a great void filled,” Franceschi­ni said. “A few years will be needed before MEIS sees its completion; however today we have made an important step forward.”

The museum has been under developmen­t since 2003, when parliament passed a law mandating its establishm­ent. Constructi­on to date has been fully funded by the state, which has allocated about $55 million. Further funding is now being sought to cover operations.

So far, two buildings in the former prison complex have undergone reconstruc­tion, and over the next three years modern structures inspired by the Torah and resembling giant, transparen­t books will be added to house the core exhibition, which is still in the early stages of developmen­t.

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