US/World News

Auschwitz museum asks for donations following revenue loss due to pandemic

(JTA) – The memorial and museum at the former Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland has lost so much income due to the coronavirus pandemic that it is now asking for public donations. In a plea issued June 3, the museum administration called on “everyone for whom the preservation of memory is important” to chip in to keep pro-grams going, even while the memorial site itself remains empty of visitors. Last year, the site of the former Nazi death camp had more than 2.3 million visitors. This year, it drew some 300,000 people before it was shut on March 12, its first closure since its first exhibit opened in 1947. 

There is no admission fee, but about 80 percent of visitors hire guides who are trained and paid by the memorial, said Paweł Sawicki, a spokesman for the memorial and museum. Of the museum’s total 2019 budget of about $29 million, more than 56 per-cent came from such sources. Most affected by the loss will be on-site and online education and research projects, publishing and exhibition projects.

The Polish Ministry of Culture and National Heritage still covers basic operating costs, and there has been extra government help for cultural institutions affected by pandemic-related shutdowns. Nor is conservation work at risk, thanks to external funds from the Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation. Museum Director Piotr M. A. Cywiński said that educational work will continue, to preserve the site as a legacy “for our children and grandchildren.” But “without additional funds, the implementation of our statutory operations is called into question.”

By the time Soviet troops liberated the camp in January 1945, more than 1.1 million people, most of them Jews, had been murdered there. The site has become a major site of remembrance pilgrimages; it is closed only three days per year. The museum has now reorganized exhibitions to minimize the risk of spreading the coronavirus. But only 400 people registered for a trial reopening on May 30 and 31 – less than three percent of the total for the same period last year (some 15,000), Sawicki said.

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