Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Solution in the works for Jewish museum

- By Vanessa Gera

A stalemate threatenin­g the independen­ce of Warsaw’s landmark Jewish museum is moving forward.

WARSAW, POLAND >> A stalemate over the future of Warsaw’s landmark Jewish history museum moved closer to a resolution on Wednesday after the former director — who won a competitio­n for a second term but whom Poland’s populist government refused to reinstate — offered to stand aside.

The government had made clear that it would never allow Dariusz Stola, director of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews from 2014-2019, to resume his leadership at the acclaimed institutio­n.

That prompted museum board members, donors and other partners to agree informally on Wednesday to support Stola’s former deputy and now acting director, Zygmunt Stepinski, as his replacemen­t. They felt the choice would be acceptable to the government and still allow the institutio­n to maintain its independen­ce.

That step came after Stola announced Tuesday that he was giving up on being director of the museum to prevent any further damage.

The impasse over the leadership of the museum has dragged on for nearly a year, creating anxieties about the future of one of the world’s most prominent Jewish museums.

The museum — which tells the 1,000-year history of Jewish life in Polish lands — was seen as a symbol of how a newly democratic Poland sought from the 1990s to revive the Jewish civilizati­on that was nearly destroyed by Nazi Germany. Under creation for two decades, it opened in 2013 and its permanent exhibition in 2014.

Today its troubles are a sign of how much has changed under a populist government willing to flout democratic norms — in this case its obligation to abide by the results of the competitio­n that Stola won — and snub internatio­nal partners.

The greatest concern has been whether the museum would be able to independen­tly decide on its programmin­g under a conservati­ve and nationalis­t government that has been placing loyalists at the helm of museums and other cultural institutes.

The decision by the museum’s supporters to support Stola’s former deputy signaled a strategic shift from trying to save Stola’s job to preserving the independen­ce of the institutio­n.

Poland’s chief rabbi Michael Schudrich, who was present at Wednesday’s meeting and had supported Stola, said: “We lost . .... But sometimes you lose in order to build further.”

Emile Schrijver, chairman of the board of the Associatio­n of European Jewish Museums, called the situation “a clear case of political interventi­on in a museum that was very successful.”

“Any museum should be an independen­t organizati­on,” Schrijver, who is also general director of the Jewish Cultural Quarter and Jewish Museum in Amsterdam, told The Associated Press. “The fact that a democratic process is being frustrated by political opportunis­m is a disgrace.”

In a country where most museums are fully state-controlled, POLIN is a unique private-public partnershi­p with three co-founders who all still have a say in the museum’s management: the Culture Ministry, the city of Warsaw and a private Jewish historical associatio­n that represents private donors, among them many Americans.

Stola is a distinguis­hed historian who has managed the museum from 2014 until last year, a time when it won multiple awards and drew hundreds of thousands of visitors from around the world each year. He enjoys the support of the city, which is led by a liberal opponent of the national government, and the many donors who consider him a worldclass scholar and manager.

His five-year term expired in February 2019. Although the government opposed him, it agreed with the other two partners to hold a competitio­n. Stola won that in May, but Culture Minister Piotr Glinski refuses to allow him back.

Since last February, Stepinski, h as served as acting director, and donors say he has done so ably. But according to museum statutes, an acting director can only serve one year, and his term is approachin­g its end later this month, creating the urgency in this week’s push for a resolution.

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 ?? PHOTOS BY CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People visit the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, Poland, Wednesday. A long stalemate over the future independen­ce of the landmark Jewish history museum is building toward a crucial turning point after the former director — who won a competitio­n for a second term but whom Poland’s populist government refuses to reinstate — offered to renounce the job.
PHOTOS BY CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People visit the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, Poland, Wednesday. A long stalemate over the future independen­ce of the landmark Jewish history museum is building toward a crucial turning point after the former director — who won a competitio­n for a second term but whom Poland’s populist government refuses to reinstate — offered to renounce the job.
 ??  ?? People walk in front of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, Poland, Wednesday.
People walk in front of the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, Poland, Wednesday.

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