My impression of the Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem,
Israel is somewhat tempered by my
prior visits to the Holocaust Museum in Dachau, Germany and the Holocaust
Museum near Auschwitz, Poland. The Holocaust Museum in Dachau did the best job of
teaching about Nazism and the Holocaust, while the Holocaust Museum near Auschwitz, Poland
wasn't a Holocaust museum per se -
it's the ruins of the massive concentration camp where over a million Jews
were murdered.
As Holocaust museum experiences go, it's tough to top Auschwitz, where I
spent an afternoon walking around by myself. I'll never forget the pond in
the middle of the compound. From afar, it seemed to move, so I approached it
for a closer look. What was moving were thousands - perhaps millions - of
frogs. The Nazis had dumped the ashes of the burnt corpses in the pond
and the frogs were still feeding on the nutrients from a million human
bodies. I
felt the presence of pure evil and left there in a hurry, utterly disgusted
at the magnitude of the evil that
people - brainwashed or not - had been and are
still capable.
Anyway, let's get back to Holocaust museum
s. Above is one of the exhibits
at the Holocaust Museum
Jerusalem. A sadistic
Nazi officer apparently ordered a Jewish tailor to make him a shirt from pages
of the Torah, which would have to be desecrated. The tailor had the last word, however, as he only used verses that speak of
curses.
Travel Tip
The Holocaust museum in Jerusalem outside the
Zion Gate is tricky to find. You may run into men sitting by
their doorways who offer to take you to the Holocaust museum if you take a
moment to step through
their doorways and sign their guest books. If you do that, they'll ask you
for money, so just keep walking. The Holocaust museum is about 50 from them, and
the cashiers at this "free" site will ask you to donate anyway once you
get there.