香港六合彩即时开奖

Holocaust Memorial. Shooting Location: Washington, DC

漏 kanzilyou/ iStock Editorial / Getty Images Plus

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Top choice in Washington, DC


Image bykanzilyou/GettyRF

For a deep understanding of the Holocaust 鈥 its victims, perpetrators and bystanders 鈥 this harrowing United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is a must-see.

Located among national monuments to freedom on the National Mall in Washington, DC, the living memorial to the Holocaust aims to inspire citizens and leaders worldwide to confront hatred, prevent genocide and promote human dignity.

Since its dedication in 1993, it has worked to advance and disseminate knowledge about this unprecedented tragedy; to preserve the memory of those who suffered; and to encourage visitors to reflect upon the moral and spiritual questions raised by the events of the Holocaust as well as their own responsibilities as citizens of a democracy.

Visitors can visit several exhibitions, including the main, permanent one and a gentler installation recommended for children aged eight and over.

History of the museum

The museum was founded as the US鈥檚 national institution for the documentation, study and interpretation of Holocaust history. It serves as a memorial to the millions of people murdered during the state-sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation of Jews, primarily, but also Roma, people with disabilities and Poles, by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945.

The museum was chartered by a unanimous Act of Congress in 1980 after the President鈥檚 Commission on the Holocaust submitted its recommendations for Holocaust remembrance and education in the US. The groundbreaking ceremony for the building on the National Mall took place in 1985, and President Ronald Reagan marked the laying of the museum cornerstone in 1988, saying, "We must make sure that [...] all humankind stares this evil in the face."

President Bill Clinton dedicated the museum on April 22, 1993, and it has now welcomed more than 40 million visitors, including 99 heads of state and more than ten million school-age children.

Exterior of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington DC
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is in Washington,DC 漏 Juanmonino/Getty Images/ iStock

What to do at the museum

The main exhibit, The Holocaust, is a permanent self-guided exhibition spanning three floors of the museum. It offers a chronological narrative of the Holocaust through historical artifacts, photographs and film footage. Throughout the exhibition, visitors will also encounter personal objects and the eyewitness testimonies of individual survivors.

You will be given the identity card of a single Holocaust victim, whose story is revealed as you take a winding route into a hellish past marked by ghettos, rail cars and death camps. It also shows the flip side of human nature, documenting the risks many citizens took to help the persecuted. Allow one to three hours to take the exhibition in, and bear in mind that there are several other fascinating exhibitions on at the museum at all times.

If you have children aged eight and over, a gentler installation 鈥 Remember the Children: Daniel鈥檚 Story 鈥 is located on the 1st floor and presents the history of the Holocaust through the experience of one child.

Tickets and other practicalities

The museum is located on the National Mall, just south of Independence Avenue SW between 14th Street and Raoul Wallenberg Place (15th Street) in Washington, DC. The nearest Metro stop is Smithsonian on the orange, blue and silver lines, located one block east of the museum. It does not have a public parking facility, but there is a paid parking garage located across the street on D Street SW between 13th and 14th Streets, and some metered parking along Independence Avenue.

Admission tickets for the museum are free and can be reserved online in advance via the museum鈥檚 website for a $1 surcharge. For those looking for a bite to eat, the Museum Caf茅 is located in the Ross Administrative Center.

The museum is open every day apart from Yom Kippur and Christmas, and its website is available in 16 languages.

The eternal flame at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
The eternal flame in the Hall of Remembrance inside the museum 漏 rypson/ iStock Editorial / Getty Images Plus

Accessibility at the museum

The National Park Service has designated approximately ten accessible parking spaces for people with disabilities at and around the Washington Monument, along Independence Avenue west of 14th Street, and at the Tidal Basin parking lot. Visitors may be dropped off on the 14th Street side of the museum for easier access by car.

The building is fully accessible to visitors who use mobility assistive devices. Elevators have been installed to provide access all floors, and ramps are available where there is a change in floor height. Wheelchairs are provided as needed from the coat check on the main floor of the museum, and accessible restrooms are located on every floor of the Permanent Exhibition and on the museum鈥檚 lower level.

The museum offers guided highlights tours for visitors who are blind or sight-impaired and their guests, but must be requested in advance. They are led by trained staff or volunteer docents and include visual description and touchable objects.

Visitors to the Permanent Exhibition receive an ID card showcasing the life history of a person who lived during the Holocaust. Large print and Braille ID cards are available from the information desk on the museum鈥檚 main floor. An audio-descriptive tour of the Hall of Witness and Hall of Remembrance is available, and audio files can be downloaded

Multimedia in exhibition spaces is captioned for visitors who are deaf or hard of hearing, and most multimedia that uses audio is equipped with T-coil technology. All First Person programs are open-captioned in real time, and recorded programs are available online with captions. Visitors to programs in the museum鈥檚 auditoriums may request assistive-listening devices.

The museum鈥檚 accessibility guide can be downloaded


香港六合彩即时开奖's must-see attractions

Nearby Washington, DC attractions

1. Bureau of Engraving & Printing

0.05 MILES

Cha-ching! The nation's paper currency is designed and printed here. Guides lead 40-minute tours during which you peer down onto the work floor where鈥

2. Floral Library

0.23 MILES

In spring, just steps from the fabled cherry blossoms surrounding the Tidal Basin, some 10,000 tulips explode in vibrant color in a sweet garden called鈥

3. Washington Monument

0.23 MILES

Peaking at 555ft (and 5in) and composed of 36,000 blocks of stone, the Washington Monument is the district's tallest structure. Political shenanigans鈥

4. Artechouse

0.27 MILES

Straddling technology, art and science, this 15,000-sq-ft, three-level state-of-the-art digital gallery mesmerizes with large-scale, interactive, multi鈥

5. National Museum of Asian Art

0.3 MILES

This is a lovely spot in which to while away a Washington afternoon. Japanese silk scrolls, smiling Buddhas, rare Islamic manuscripts and Chinese jades鈥

7. George Mason Memorial

0.33 MILES

This little oasis of flowers and fountains honors the famed statesman and author of the Commonwealth of Virginia Declaration of Rights (a forerunner to鈥

8. National Museum of American History

0.35 MILES

Containing all kinds of artifacts of the American experience, this museum has as its centerpiece the flag that flew over Baltimore's Fort McHenry during鈥