Jewish Refugees in Shanghai

This multi-branch exhibition includes images and ephemera of European Jews who were displaced during the war, films and lectures about their time in China, and a discussion about their eventual emigration to the United States.

When Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany in the 1930s and 1940s, he issued a series of anti-Semitic decrees, depriving Jews of their civil rights. With the outbreak of WWII, many Jews chose to flee their hometowns, and a considerable number of them took refuge in Shanghai, China—a city they could travel to without a visa. Around that same time, students from the Mir Yeshiva in Vilna, Lithuania, also made their way to East Asia to escape the Nazi regime, setting up yeshivas in their new home. Many of these students—and their families—emigrated to Brooklyn, NY, following Japan’s surrender in 1945.

Exhibition Dates & Locations

March 4 - May 31

Borough Park Library
1265 43rd Street
Brooklyn, NY 11219

Exhibition Details
March 4 - May 31

Mapleton Library
1702 60th Street
Brooklyn, NY 11204

Exhibition Details
March 11 - May 31

Central Library
10 Grand Army Plaza
Brooklyn, NY 11238

Exhibition Details
April 22 - June 30*

Kensington Library
4207 18th Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11218

Exhibition Details

This exhibit is put on in collaboration with the Amud Aish Memorial Musuem and the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum.

*Please note that Kensington Library will be closed from May 3 - May 22 for renovations.

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BKLYN Incubator is supported by generous funding provided by The Charles H. Revson Foundation and Robin K. and Jay L. Lewis