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They say that you die twice – once when you stop breathing and the second when somebody mentions your name for the last time. But what happens when you try to erase the names and memory of an entire nation? Only slivers remain of the former Jewish life – unsigned pieces of paper, an unidentified face in a photo, an armband with the Star of David, or a book with handwritten notes on the margins.
For over 75 years, the Jewish Historical Institute has been working to preserve the memory of those people and their stories. The JHI is the beating heart of the former Jewish Warsaw – the heart of a city that once was.
The Institute stores tens of thousands of documents, manuscripts, old prints, books, artworks, and photos. The collection remains under the watchful care of experts at the JHI and is being catalogued, described, and processed in a way which allows us to discover as much of its history as possible. It is also being preserved and digitised, so that it remains in prime shape and is available to future generations.
We want to showcase these objects – many of which are buried deep in our storage rooms – to a wider audience, which is why we are presenting their photos in the space of the city which before the war was home to the largest Jewish community in Europe. Our efforts have taken the shape of the outdoor exhibition The Heart of the City That Once Was. Collection of the Jewish Historical Institute.
The exhibition comprises fifteen posters placed in the public space. They present photos of unique objects from the JHI collection, accompanied by modern commentary from artists, writers, journalists, researchers, and experts, all available on the website of the Institute. The Heart of the City That Once Was. Collection of the Jewish Historical Institute is an exhibition which will convert an ordinary bus stop, advertisement pillar, or poster – sites we pass by every day on our way to work or school – into a vehicle for reviving memory and contemplating the past.
The individual exhibits come together to form a contemplative walk.
You can see the exhibition from March 1 to March 31, 2024.
You can find the online exhibition here
MAP OF THE EXHIBITION ON GOOGLE MAPS
A paper version of the map is available at the Jewish Historical Institute.
Director of the JHI: Monika Krawczyk
Curator: Krzysztof Czajka-Kalinowski
Organisational curator: Anna Dobrowolska-Balcerzak
Conceptual support: Małgorzata Sołtysik, Marta Kapełuś, Ada Małczyńska
In cooperation with: Agnieszka Jeż, Agnieszka Kajczyk, Agnieszka Mastalerz, Agnieszka Witkowska-Krych, Anna Kowalczyk, Beata Chomątowska, Jowita Michalska, Justyna Majewska, Karolina Sulej, Ola Bilińska, Piotr Paziński, Sylwia Chutnik
Visual identification and graphic design: Lidia Zajdzińska
Editing: Magdalena Romanowska
Translation: Natalia Kłopotek
Communication and marketing: Aleksandra Galant, Anna Ekielska, Natasza Majewska
Promotional support: Aleksandra Przeździecka-Kujałowicz
Digitisation: Grzegorz Kwolek, Szymon Tłuszcz, Tytus Rojek
Conservation: Violetta Bachur
Acknowledgements: Franciszek Bojańczyk, Urszula Antczak, Dariusz Lipowski, Marzena Mikos, Olga Pastewka, Włodzimierz Konefał