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UN exhibition highlights global aid to Holocaust survivors
A United Nations exhibition about the global aid and relief to survivors of the World War II Holocaust was launched at the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum on Monday.
2023-1-31Singapore's Ambassador to China Visited the Museum
On November 5th, accompanied by staff of the Singapore Consulate General in Shanghai, Mr. Lui Tuck Yew, Singapore's Ambassador to China and Mrs. Lui Soo Fen, Spouse of Ambassador, visited the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum.
2021-11-17Qin Gang Visited Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum
Qin Gang formerly served as China's Vice Foreign Minister and is currently the Chinese Ambassador to the United States.
2021-7-298 National Flags Added to the Flag Wall
On March 5th, 23 foreign students from Tongji Institute of Environment for Sustainable Development paid a visit to Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum, among which 8 students.
2021-3-8Shanghai Tourism Officials met with Israeli Consul General in Shanghai to Promote Cooperation
On January 8, Ms. Cheng Meihong, the Deputy Director General of the Shanghai Municipal Administration of Culture and Tourism met with Edward Shapira, the Consul General of Israel in Shanghai in the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum. The two sides discussed further cooperation on tourist and cultural affairs.
2021-1-12Expanded Jewish museum documents bittersweet refugee era in city
Located in the Tilanqiao area of Hongkou District, the renovated museum has more than quadrupled its size to 4,000 square meters, creating space for exhibits whose numbers have surged 10-fold to 1,000.
2020-12-14Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum reopens its doors to the public
When the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum was established in 2007, it faced the challenge of collecting enough exhibits to tell the story of the estimated 20,000 Jewish refugees who sought sanctuary in Shanghai's Hongkou district during World War II.
2020-12-11China’s only Jewish refugee museum reopens
The Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum, the only one in China thatdocumentsJewish refugees’ life in Shanghai during World War II, has reopened after more than two year’s expansion and reconstruction.
2020-12-11Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum reopens after expansion
From 1933 to 1941, Shanghai accepted around 30,000 Jewish refugees fleeing the Holocaust in Europe. On Tuesday, the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum reopened to the public. On a wall of over 18,000 Jewish names, stories are recorded just the way they said at the time.
2020-12-10