The Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow
Panasonic is proud to announce 52 projectors are installed at the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow, Russia.
Cinema Theater: 6 units of PT-DZ6700
Cities and Beyond Gallery: 2 units of PT-DZ8700(PT-DZ110X) and 7 units of PT-DZ570
Soviet Union Gallery: 6 units of PT-DZ6700
WWII and Holocaust Gallery: 8 units of PT-DZ6700 and 2 units of PT-DZ8700 (PT-DZ110X)
Hall of Remembrance: 4 units of PT-DZ6700
Migration Map: 1 unit of PT-DZ6700
For more information, please visit our global website.
Moscow. The Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center.
“History of Education in Russia” at Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center
How does the story of Russia’s thousand-year-old education system transform from a history lesson to an exciting and engaging learning experience for teenagers? Prosveshcheniye Education Holding turned to Lorem Ipsum to answer just that.
Through a combination of colorful, historical characters, popular movies and modern technology, Lorem Ipsum constructed an immersive exhibit exploring the history of Russian education in one single lesson, outside the traditional classroom setting.
The exhibition consists of five parts, each corresponding to a significant period in the development of Russia’s education system. Visiting teachers narrate the story of each period while students use augmented reality glasses to view animated illustrations curated and designed by Lorem Ipsum.
Each period concludes with a short film—directed by Yan Vizinberg—in which, historical figures who contributed to the development of Russia’s education system tell the story in their own words. These characters are brought to life by two of Russia’s most noted film and theater stars, Aleksey Serebryakov (star of the the Golden Globe-winning film “Leviathan”) and Yulia Peresild (star of the 2017 film “Cold Tango”). The actors are fully transformed in makeup and splendid costumes from the vaults of the legendary Mosfilm. The actors take on the roles of Catherine the Great, Leo Tolstoy, Vladimir Lenin and others, and provide a fresh take on centuries past.
Jewish Museum opened in Moscow
Russia: Jewish Museum and Tolerance Centre marks Holocaust Remembrance Day
Holocaust survivors, officials and foreign ambassadors all attended Moscow’s Jewish Museum and Tolerance Centre annual ceremony to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Friday.
Besides the Head of Moscow’s Department of National Policy Vitaly Suchkov, ambassadors of several other countries, including Israel’s Gary Koren , America’s John Tefft, Germany’s Rudiger von Fritsch, Poland’s Wlodzimierz Marciniak, and Czechia’s Vladimir Remek, were also present.
Rabbi Berel Lazar opened the event with the traditional Jewish Kaddish prayer. Afterwards Russian Jewish Leaders and Foreign Ambassadors lit six candles honouring the memory of the six million victims of the Holocaust.
SOT, Alexander Boroda, President of the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia (Russian): “It’s very important, that today’s younger generation know about that tragedy. The Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia, together with other Russian Jewish Organisations, makes a lot of effort so this story will be never forgotten, to make it like a vaccine against hate.
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Moscow:Jewish museum/Москва:Еврейский музей
Сегодня я хочу показать вам Еврейский музей и центр толерантности-самый технологичный музей России,а так же пробуем еврейские вкусняшки))
PM Netanyahu and Russian President Putin at Jewish Museum in Moscow
ראש הממשלה בנימין נתניהו ונשיא רוסיה ולדימיר פוטין בביקור במוזיאון היהודי במוסקבה, שם סיירו בתערוכת סוביבור-מנצחי המוות לציון 75 שנים למרד במחנה ההשמדה סוביבור.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Russian President Vladimir Putin visited the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow, and toured the Sobibor: Victorious over Death exhibit.
וידאו: עומר מירון, לעמ
סאונד: בן פרץ, לעמ
New interactive museum explores history of Jews in Russia
(15 Nov 2012) RUSSIA JEWS
SOURCE: AP TELEVISION
RESTRICTIONS: TECHNOLOGY CLIENTS ONLY
LENGTH: 5:59
Moscow - 13 November 2012
1. Wide of guests sitting down across from a screen in the Jewish Museum showing hologram enacting a Jewish family having a Seder supper
2. Mid of same
3. Wide of same guests getting up and leaving the table
4. Mid of Asya Muraveva, a guest, sitting down at the Seder table
5. Mid of Muraveva touching candles, screen coming to life with video of Jewish mother and child praying
6. Mid of image of Jewish mother and child praying
7. Wide of Muraveva across from image of mother and child
8. Close-up of the mother and child.
9. Mid of Muraveva
10. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Asya Muraveva, a guest at the museum:
I think the structure is very interesting, the presentation of information and the content, because you're interacting with something that's not alive, but you have the feeling that you are in the presence of somebody, that you are with living people, with something alive, with a kind of world.
11. Mid of statues of old Jewish women at the market
12. Close-up of one of the statues
13. Mid of a man standing near the market statues, his hand touching an interactive screen placed in one of the market barrels
14. Close-up of the man's hand touching an interactive screen in the bucket
15. Wide of a man touching an interactive Torah scroll
16. Close-up of interactive Torah scroll
17. Mid of same man
18. Mid of same man sitting down next to a statue of a praying Jew
19. Close-up on the statue's prayerbook
20. Wide of a traditional 19th-century style cafe, where Jewish intellectuals in cities like Odessa and Yalta gathered to share ideas
21. Mid of a photograph of a traditional Jewish cafe
22. Mid of Simon Hewitt, CEO and Director of the Jewish Museum, sitting down at the cafe across from the statue of a turn-of-the-century Jew
23. Mid of the statue
24. Mid of Simon Hewitt at the cafe table, watching a video
25. Close-up of Simon Hewitt's's face
26. Close-up of the interactive cafe table
27. SOUNDBITE (English) Simon Hewitt, CEO and Director of the Jewish Museum:
When people come through this exhibition, see the good and the bad that has happened to a minority within the Russian Federation and the Russian Empire, when they reach our Centre of Tolerance they will have a greater understanding of how one might react to minorities. And there we have a whole program, which is not related to Judaism or Jews as such, but to issues of racism, xenophobia.
28. Wide pan of the museum
Moscow - 11 November 11 2012
29. Wide of the Rozins, a four-generation Jewish family in Moscow, gathered at the table
30. Close-up of teacups
31. Close-up of Geda Zimanenko, 100-year-old great-grandmother of the family
32. Mid of other members of the family
33. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Geda Zimanenko:
The village constable would come once a week, perhaps it was Sundays. He had a moustache and (uniform) stripes, with shoulder-straps and a sword, and my mother brought him a shot of vodka and five roubles on a small tray (because the family was living illegally in Khrakov, beyond the Pale of Settlement).
34. Close-up of biscuits and tea
34. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Geda Zimanenko:
I refused to leave the class. I sat there, frowning. Sometimes my mother would ask, well what happened, what did you hear? I refused to listen, I didn't understand why (one of the girls) wanted to kick me out of the class (for being the only Jew). That was how I felt about it.
35. Wide of Zimanenko with family, looking at a poster with photographs of her and family members during different periods
36. Close-up of a young photo of Zimanenko
37. Close-up of a wooden figurine of Fiddler on the Roof
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Jewish Museum Tells the Story of the Ancient Nation in a High-Tech Language
It is hardly surprising that the Jewish Museum was dubbed the most high-tech museum in all of the former Soviet Union. The museum uses state-of-the-art technologies, including interactive installations and 3D reenactments, to narrate the entire history of the ancient Jewish nation.
Moscow Jewish Museum Hosts Exhibition of Russian Revolution
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Voices of Marс Chagall, Vera Inber, Lev Trotsky, and the events of 1917 in paintings, documents, and first-person narratives. All of this is The History of One People in the Years of Revolution. It's the title of an exhibition that opened in the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center. Visitor can read personal letters, and even take a glimpse through a peephole. Mikhail Alterkop reporting.
Ancient Jewish Library Welcomed to New Home in Moscow
Russian President Vladimir Putin visited Moscow's Jewish Museum and Tolerance Centre as an important collection of ancient Jewish books, the Schneerson library, arrived on Thursday. The President familiarised himself with the most valuable parts of the collection, which contains some 12,000 books and 50,000 rare documents dating from the 18th to the beginning of the 20th century.
The transfer follows years of debate with the New York City based Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic community who demand the return of the library. The movement argues they are the right owners of the books, as the author of the collection, Schneerson, headed the organisation after moving to the United States. However the transfer of the Schneerson library was welcomed by the Chief Rabbi of Russia, Berl Lazar, who called it a big day for Russian Jews.
Russia has maintained that it will keep the collection, saying that it is a state property and part of Russian culture. The matter got into the media spotlight in January after a US judge ordered Russia to pay $50,000 (€37,000) per day until it returns the library. The decision to move the collection to Jewish Museum and Tolerance Centre was proposed by Putin himself this year during a meeting of the Presidential Council for Interethnic Relations.
Moscow's Jewish Museum and Centre of Tolerance was opened in November 2012, with Israeli President Shimon Peres travelling to Moscow for its inauguration. It features several interactive displays regarding the Jewish peoples' long and tumultuous place in Russian history. Now home to the the Schneerson library collection, the museum's new library department operates as a part of the Russian State Library.
RUSSIA: FIRST JEWISH CENTRE UNVEILED
Russian/Eng/Nat
XFA
On Monday evening several hundred Moscow Jews attended the unveiling of the Russian capital's first Jewish community centre built on the site of a wooden Lubavich synagogue gutted by fire seven years ago.
President Vladimir Putin and Russia's Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar cut the tape in a ceremony described as the start of a new era of Russian Jewish renaissance.
Putin stressed the importance of the Jewish community in Russia, a country often criticized in the past for overt and covert anti-Semitism.
The 45-room centre has a synagogue, library, restaurants, gymnasium, classrooms, youth halls, computer lab,
exercise room, imax-like theater, and two mikvahs (ritual baths).
The ceremony was attended by the Chief Rabbi of Israel, the U-S ambassador to Moscow, and other dignitaries, including Nathan Sharansky, a prisoner of conscience in the Soviet period and now member of the Israeli Knesset (parliament).
Sharansky said the new community center has risen in the place notorious for pogroms, persecution and fires directed against Jews.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
The Jewish community has proved to be a constructive and influential force. It not only unites the Jewish people, but also, one cay say, we, in the governing structures, feel its influence on ourselves. It is exerting its influence on us, too.
SUPER CAPTION: Vladimir Putin
SOUNDBITE: (English)
Here's just the place which for us was like a symbol of the place of pogroms, persecution and fires and attempts to destroy our identity. And this place where now you see this great building, the community centre, with the blessing and participation of the President, no doubt symbolizes a lot about a new era.
SUPER CAPTION: Natan Sharansky, member of Israeli Parliament
SOUNDBITE: (English)
We personally believe that radically inside the heart of the people there was always respect and love for the Jewish people. When the government was against it, this automatically showed in the people. When the government shows support, it's for sure going to show in the hearts of the people and we believe that Jews are welcome here.
SUPER CAPTION: Rabbi Berel Lazar, Chief Rabbi of Russia
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PM Netanyahu's Remarks at Ceremony at Jewish Museum in Moscow
ראש הממשלה בנימין נתניהו ונשיא רוסיה ולדימיר פוטין השתתפו באירוע לציון יום השואה הבינלאומי במוזיאון היהדות והסובלנות במוסקבה.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Russian President Vladimir Putin attend ceremony commemorating the International Holocaust Remembrance Day at the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow.
וידאו: עומר מירון, לעמ
סאונד: בן פרץ, לעמ
80% Of The 1st Soviet Government Members Were Jews - Putin During A Visit To Moscow’s Jewish Museum
Russian President Vladimir Putin says predominantly Jewish Soviet government was guided by false ideological considerations.
“I thought about something just now: The decision to nationalize this library was made by the first Soviet government, whose composition was 80-85 percent Jewish,” Putin said June 13 during a visit to Moscow’s Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center.
Putin was referencing the library of Rabbi Joseph I. Schneerson, the late leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. The books, which are claimed by Chabad representatives in the United States, began being moved to the museum in Moscow this month.
According to the official transcription of Putin’s speech at the museum, he went on to say that the politicians on the predominantly Jewish Soviet government “were guided by false ideological considerations and supported the arrest and repression of Jews, Russian Orthodox Christians, Muslims and members of other faiths. They grouped everyone into the same category.
“Thankfully, those ideological goggles and faulty ideological perceptions collapsed. And today, we are essentially returning these books to the Jewish community with a happy smile.”
Widely seen as the first Soviet government, the Council of People’s Commissars was formed in 1917 and comprised 16 leaders, including chairman Vladimir Lenin, foreign affairs chief Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin, who was in charge of the People’s Commissariat of Nationalities.
Putin & Netanyahu at Jewish Museum in Moscow
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Russian President Vladimir Putin visited the Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center in Moscow, and toured the Sobibor: Victorious over Death exhibit.
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#Putin #Netanyahu #Jews
Jewish museum. Moscow. Еврейский музей и центр толерантности.
Russian FarFor Yo at The Jewish Museum in Moscow Contemporary Dance 2019
Russian FarFor Yo at The Jewish Museum in Moscow 2019
Russian FarFor Yo / Contemporary dance performance at The Lumiere Brothers center for photography / Moscow, Russia
SWEDEN, MALMÖ ART | DANCING CRAZY sexy DOLL, suspense, PSYCHEDELIC, paranoia, VIDEO ART | МАЛЬМЁ
Voyeurisme VIDEOINSTALLATION BY ZILLA LEUTENEGGER | VIDEOTOUR OF THE EXHIBITION ПОДГЛЯДЫВАНИЕ
Performance, contemporary DANCE at the Tate Modern 2015 / Парень танцует и валяется по полу под лозунгами Сталина
INDOOR FLIGHTS by ERNESTO BALLESTEROS La Biennale di Venezia, 2015 | PERFORMANCE
Performance Art by Kristina Yatkovskaya at the FUTURUM MOSCOW 2019
FUTURUM MOSCOW 2019
FUTURUM MOSCOW 2018
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Jewish History Museum Preaches Tolerance in Modern Russia
One century ago, Russia was home to the largest Jewish population in the world - about 5 million people. But Nazi genocide - followed by massive emigration - radically cut Russia's Jewish population to only 150,000 today. VOA's Jim Brooke has more from Moscow.
Jews in Moscow say
The short part of future project 'Jewish in Moscow say'
cosmonaut museum,moscow,russia