德國的一個很有特色的猶太人博物館,這座博物館很獨特的,這裏的博物館也是很好的哦,整個區域的很多的東西的,博物館里也是很好玩的設施的,來這裏玩的時候可以看到很多的人的哦。
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猶太博物館位於以知名的銀行家羅特施爾德(Rothschild)之名命名的羅特施爾德宮內。
Excellent museum with a large range of exhibits, and the staff which some are Holocaust survivors were very helpful. A lot of students on excursions. Very moving stories and a in depth historical journey of the events of the Holocaust and experiences of the Jewish people. If you’re interested in WW2, this museum is a must see
The Jewish Museum, located at the junction of Fifth Avenue and 92nd Street in Berlin, Germany, was built from 1993 to 1995 to commemorate the six million Jews who died in the Third Reich and has a history of nearly two thousand years in Germany.
One of the most trembling places in the museum is the "Massacre Tower" at the bottom of the corridor of death. The other is the 15-meter-high tower with rare light. The ground is filled with sheets of metal sculpture-face space. Pushing open the extremely heavy iron gate and entering the tower of the Holocaust, when the door closed, except for a little light on the top of the head, the whole body was dark. If it weren't for other visitors, even the sound would disappear in the space. It only takes tens of seconds to look up at the faint light above your head, and you will soon be strangled by silence and darkness. As for the showroom with thousands of metal faces, it is even more depressing and terrifying. After reading some introductions, it was said that visitors could "walk" up to experience the pain of Jews being trampled on. However, I really do not have the courage to look at more than a minute, I feel that I will hear the cries of the victims, let alone actually go up.
Germans have a sense of original sin towards Jews. This article introduces the establishment and end of the Jewish Habitat in Frankfurt, the struggle for integration for centuries, and the rebirth of Jews after the war.
Maria_Small:Bertha-Pappenheim-Platz 1, 60438 Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany
Raelynn_Snider:我推薦羅馬廣場,法蘭克福大教堂,歌德故居,鐵橋,美茵河
Natalia_Snow:猶太博物館附近有這幾間酒店:法蘭克福市NH精選酒店(NH Collection Frankfurt City),法蘭克福宜必思中心酒店(Ibis Frankfurt Centrum),斯堪法蘭克福博物館酒店(Scandic Frankfurt Museumsufer),法蘭克福弗萊明快捷城際酒店(Fleming’s Express Hotel Frankfurt),法蘭克福希爾頓酒店(Hilton Frankfurt)
Isabelle_Solis:您可以考慮Der Fette Bulle,Wacker's Kaffee,Atschel,Im Herzen Afrikas,梅迪奇餐廳
德國的一個很有特色的猶太人博物館,這座博物館很獨特的,這裏的博物館也是很好的哦,整個區域的很多的東西的,博物館里也是很好玩的設施的,來這裏玩的時候可以看到很多的人的哦。
Excellent museum with a large range of exhibits, and the staff which some are Holocaust survivors were very helpful. A lot of students on excursions. Very moving stories and a in depth historical journey of the events of the Holocaust and experiences of the Jewish people. If you’re interested in WW2, this museum is a must see
The Jewish Museum, located at the junction of Fifth Avenue and 92nd Street in Berlin, Germany, was built from 1993 to 1995 to commemorate the six million Jews who died in the Third Reich and has a history of nearly two thousand years in Germany.
One of the most trembling places in the museum is the "Massacre Tower" at the bottom of the corridor of death. The other is the 15-meter-high tower with rare light. The ground is filled with sheets of metal sculpture-face space. Pushing open the extremely heavy iron gate and entering the tower of the Holocaust, when the door closed, except for a little light on the top of the head, the whole body was dark. If it weren't for other visitors, even the sound would disappear in the space. It only takes tens of seconds to look up at the faint light above your head, and you will soon be strangled by silence and darkness. As for the showroom with thousands of metal faces, it is even more depressing and terrifying. After reading some introductions, it was said that visitors could "walk" up to experience the pain of Jews being trampled on. However, I really do not have the courage to look at more than a minute, I feel that I will hear the cries of the victims, let alone actually go up.
Germans have a sense of original sin towards Jews. This article introduces the establishment and end of the Jewish Habitat in Frankfurt, the struggle for integration for centuries, and the rebirth of Jews after the war.