China Daily Global Weekly

A slice of Shanghai history

Jewish Refugees Museum reopens in expanded form, tells an important story from city’s past

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

When the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum was establishe­d in 2007, it faced the challenge of collecting enough exhibits to tell the story of the estimated 20,000 Jewish refugees who sought sanctuary in Shanghai’s Hongkou district during World War II.

Since 2010, when the museum received a toy rickshaw donated by a former Jewish resident, more donated items have come in and the museum had attracted so many visitors — an annual average of 100,000 — that it was forced to undertake an expansion project in 2017.

On Dec 8, the renovated museum, which is located on the site of the former Ohel Moshe Synagogue built in 1927 in Hongkou district, reopened its doors to the public.

The venue is now four times larger than before and features new function halls, educationa­l facilities and nearly 1,000 exhibits — there were just 150 in the past — that tell the stories of many Jews who took refuge in Shanghai to escape Nazi massacres, and the relationsh­ip they shared with the Chinese.

New exhibits include personal narratives, books and memorabili­a from refugees donated by themselves or their offspring, as well as collection­s of local residents. New technologi­es such as multimedia films have been installed to improve the visitor experience.

Chen Jian, curator of the museum, said the main theme of the expanded exhibition­s is to establish a community of a shared future for mankind.

Among the new exhibits is a knitted handbag donated by Shanghai

resident Jin Wenzhen, whose grandfathe­r opened a rice store on East Changzhi Road in Hongkou district in the 1940s.

Her grandfathe­r received the handbag one evening in 1940 when a Jewish couple carrying a child suffering from fever came in to borrow money. They gave the handbag as collateral and they would redeem it once they could pay him back. However, the couple never showed up again and the man had been concerned about them and kept the handbag for years before passing it to Jin.

The history of the Jewish Pao Chia guards is revealed by another new

exhibit, a whistle donated by a former Jewish refugee last year. The guards were male Jewish refugees in Shanghai, usually aged between 20 and 45, who took turns to maintain order in the community they lived in after the Japanese authoritie­s took over the foreign settlement­s and concession­s in Shanghai in 1943. Each guard had an armband, a rope and a whistle.

Also included in the new exhibits is a white wedding gown worn by Betty Grebenschi­koff, a Jewish refugee who spent 11 years in Shanghai and now lives in the United States.

She has revisited her former residence on Zhoushan Road near the

museum many times and decided to make the donation during her fifth trip in 2013.

“I have four daughters, a son, grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren, but without Shanghai, I would have nothing,” Grebenschi­koff said.

The expanded museum also features a new library complete with a collection of more than 8,000 books donated by Kurt Wick, an 82-year-old former refugee who arrived in Shanghai in 1939 with his family when he was just one-year old.

The museum’s Wall of Names has also been expanded from 13,732 names before the expansion to the

current 18,578 people identified as Jewish refugees in the city at the time. There is a blank section for more names to be added as a result of further historical research.

“The enlargemen­t and renovation show the great importance Shanghai’s government attaches to the shared history of Jews and Chinese,” Edward Shapira, consul-general of Israel in Shanghai, said at the opening ceremony of the museum on Dec 8.

“The unique museum should be included in every itinerary of tourists from China and abroad in the city, and we will join forces on promoting this matter,” he said.

 ?? GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY ?? A visitor takes a photo at a set of sculptures showing Jewish refugees looking for names of their relatives at the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum, as it reopened to the public on Dec 8.
GAO ERQIANG / CHINA DAILY A visitor takes a photo at a set of sculptures showing Jewish refugees looking for names of their relatives at the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum, as it reopened to the public on Dec 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States