We walked through the Royal Ontario Museum’s new Auschwitz exhibit. Hear what’s inside

The show opened just ahead of the 80th anniversary of the death camp's liberation.
Barracks from Auschwitz's satellite camp Monowitz
Restored shell of a prisoner's barrack from the real Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi death camp, part of the new exhibit at the Royal Ontario Museum, which opened Jan. 10. (Ellin Bessner photo)

Auschwitz. Not Long Ago. Not Far Away. opened Jan. 10 in Toronto at the Royal Ontario Museum, marking the only Canadian stop for the eight-year-old travelling show. The exhibit originally launched in Spain in 2017. The Toronto version is a smaller edition due to space restrictions but still showcasing some 500 artifacts and photos from the actual site of Auschwitz, the modern world’s most notorious modern genocide factory.

But while the Canadian debut may seem belated, the timing is significant: it arrives just a couple of weeks ahead of the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau on Jan. 27. It’s also a significant time for the Canadian Jewish community, which is facing an unprecedented spike in antisemitism, including Holocaust denial and distortion, wherein Israelis are being called modern Nazis for their military response in Gaza after Oct. 7.

Were these issues on the minds of the curators? And has the exhibit adapted to a post-Oct. 7 world? 

The CJN Daily‘s host, Ellin Bessner, went to see for herself.

On a private media tour on the day before the exhibit opened to the public, Bessner walked through the show, wondering about the relevance of the eerie similarities between this past year and the months leading up to the Holocaust. As she discovered, the organizers aren’t moralizing or preaching, but rather letting their rigorously researched historical evidence and facts speak for themselves.

On the episode, you’ll hear from Toronto Holocaust historian professor Robert Jan van Pelt, whose mother survived Auschwitz; from British curator Paul Salmons, plus from Luis Ferreiro, director of the private Spanish company MUSEALIA which owns the touring exhibit. Joshua Basseches, the CEO of the ROM, also joins.

What we talked about:

  • Learn more about the ROM exhibit Auschwitz: Not So Long Ago. Not So Far Away and how to buy tickets. School groups get free admission.
  • Learn more about the exhibit’s chief Auschwitz historian, Toronto professor Robert Jan van Pelt, in The CJN archives 
  • Read about the ROM’s exhibit 2017 called “The Evidence Room” which professor van Pelt also curated, in The CJN archives.

Credits

  • Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
  • Production team: Zachary Kauffman (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
  • Music: Dov Beck-Levine

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