The beginning of the exhibition - Remembering the Temple
Franz Kimmel (© Jewish Museum Munich)

Jewish Museum Munich, February 27th - September 1st 2013

A Time for Everything
Rituals against Forgetting


The exhibition focuses on strategies against forgetting from a Jewish perspective, on Jewish rituals of transition and remembrance. It shows the origin of these rituals, how they are practiced, and what they mean. In addition to the cyclical religious rituals of remembrance, strategies against historical forgetting are shown.
Birth, childhood, school, maturity, independence, marriage, old age, and death mark painful or joyful phases in each of our lives. Like other cultures, Judaism has also developed strategies of helping us through these transitions. In the exhibition, some sixty objects from public and private collections stand for the universal nature of these rites of passage that at the same time are of unique importance to each individual.

The community also conducts rituals recalling events that shaped history. These include annual holidays and several-day festivals such as Pesah that commemorates the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt, Hanukkah, the Festival of Lights (remembering the victory), and Sukkot, the Feast of Booths (commemorating the pilgrimage). All three last several days and remember important passages in Jewish history or the year cycle.

Collective secular rituals include those that strengthen national identity and the loyal bond to the "fatherland." Contemporary remembrance rituals also reflect the Nazi era and the Shoah. The American artist Quintan Ana Wikswo based an artistic project on the remains of the so-called "Sonderbau" (special block) in Dachau – the concentration camp brothel – and created literary and photographic commemorative works of art. Even today, this group of victims – sexually exploited women in concentration camps – is still omitted from public commemorative rituals.

Wikswo"s pictures focus on those Jewish stories of suffering that have been neither told nor documented. A selection of these haunting, large-format photographs presents a challenging contrast to the "innocent" objects and rituals against forgetting.


Curator: Felicitas Heimann-Jelinek, xhibit.at, Wien
Exhibition architect: Martin Kohlbauer, Wien
Graphic design: A. und H. Haller, Wien
Editing and copy editing (exhibition texts and catalogue): Michaela Feurstein-Prasser, xhibit.at

Link to the film made on the occation of the exhibition

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Remembering the Temple - projection of the floor of the Beth Alpha Synagogue

Franz Kimmel (© Jewish Museum Munich)

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At Time for Everything - exhibition start

Franz Kimmel (© Jewish Museum Munich)

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Remembering Finitness - Water Container

Franz Kimmel (© Jewish Museum Munich)

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Mizrah, Bad Mergentheim, 1922

Franz Kimmel (© Jewish Museum Munich)

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Torah-Shild/Tas from Munich 1856

Franz Kimmel (© Jewish Museum Munich)

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Torah Crown/Keter, Langensulzbach, Alsace, c. 1900

© Musée Alsacien

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Comb and Nail Cleaner from the Chewra Kadisha, Eisenstadt, beginning 19c

David Peters (© Sammlung Ariel Muzicant)

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Shabbat Plate, Isreal, 1999, artist: Zelig Segal (*1933)

David Peters (© Sammlung Georg Muzicant)

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Sukkot Booth/Sukkah from Baisingen, 1900-25

© Stadtverwaltung Rottenburg am Neckar

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Quintan Ana Wikswo, Sonderbauten

© Quintan Ana Wikswo