Monday, 29 July 2024

ANU – Museum of the Jewish People

Anu – Museum of the Jewish People is located in Tel Aviv, at the centre of the Tel Aviv University campus in Ramat Aviv. The Hebrew word Anu, or אנו, means 'we, us'. The museum, the largest Jewish museum in the world, was formerly known as Beit Hatfutsot (Museum of the Jewish Diaspora) and was the brainchild of Dr. Nahum Goldmann, founder and first president of the World Jewish Congress. Plans for a complete overhaul of Beit Hatfutsot began in 2007 and the museum underwent a decade-long, $100 million expansion. It reopened to the public as Anu in March 2021. Mister Handmade in Israel and I visited in April of this year.
Anu tells the ongoing story of the Jewish people, celebrating and exploring the experiences, accomplishments and spirit of the Jewish community from biblical times to the present day. The museum offers three floors of new exhibition galleries, a children's gallery and a rotating schedule of temporary exhibitions. 
The museum has some amazing displays, some of which are interactive. Our visit began on the third floor, which is named "A Mosaic - Modern Jewish Identity and Culture" and is devoted to exploring Jewish contributions to contemporary culture. Artifacts include a 1982 model of E.T. in the hall dedicated to Jewish contributions to Hollywood, the guitar Leonard Cohen played at his final concert in Israel in 2009, and a lace collar worn by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Digital interactive touch screens invite visitors to prepare the ingredients for Yemenite Jachnun and the Ethiopian flatbread Injera, among others recipes. The only thing missing was the smell of food cooking!
On the floor below, titled "The Journey - The Jewish Story Through Time", we learnt the story of the Jewish people from antiquity to the present day. This story recounts periods of growth, prosperity and flourishing cultural dialogue, but also times of pogroms and persecution. I found the poem above, in the section about the Holocaust, particularly moving.
The first floor, titled "Foundations - a Common Core, a Universal Message" presents the foundations of Judaism, including Jewish practice, beliefs and traditions, and the Bible and its influence on world culture. In May 2023 the Codex Sassoon 1053 was purchased on behalf of the American Friends of Anu for $38.1 million, making it one of the most expensive manuscripts ever sold. It is the oldest most complete Bible, containing all 24 books of the Tanakh, and is now displayed permanently on the "Foundations" floor of the museum. It is not every day that we get to see a book that is over 1,100 years old!
The world-renowned collection of Anu's synagogue models is displayed in the Synagogue Hall. The exhibition showcases 21 scale models of synagogues past and present from around the world, while a set of films invites visitors into different communities' Shabbat worship.
Another exhibition promotes Jewish humour. Mister Handmade in Israel spent, ahem, quite some time watching episodes of Seinfeld in the replica of Jerry's living room!
We ended our visit to the museum at the temporary exhibition "October Seventh". The exhibition curates works by 25 artists whose creative activity reflects the atrocious times Israeli society is facing since 7th October. Some of them are living artists, some deceased - either murdered on 7th October or fallen during the ongoing war. Others are residents (or former residents) of the southern areas, who suffered the loss of their loved ones, their homes, or whose families were affected by the horrors of the massacre.
In the days following the Hamas attacks of 7th October, Anu reacted immediately, inviting evacuees from the north and south into its Tel Aviv location, offering workshops and a space to just hang out. Then, when Orit Shaham-Gover, the museum's chief curator, was contacted by a relative of then-hostage Raz Ben Ami about her artwork (Ben Ami was released at the end of November while her husband, Ohad, remains a captive), she took a drive to get Ben Ami's works. Along with art by Inbar Heiman, known in the international graffiti artist community as Pink, who was murdered in Hamas captivity, and several others, she created an installation in the museum's lobby.
Anyone who walked through the doors of the museum saw those artists' works but Shaham-Gover felt it wasn't enough, and the exhibit, "October Seventh", was born. It will remain in place at Anu until at least 7th October this year.
The exhibition includes pieces by artists who experienced the 7th October attacks from both near and far, before and after 7th October. There is a work by Haim Maor about Kibbutz Be'eri resident and curator Sophie Berzon Mackie, as she sent out frantic messages about the terrorists in the kibbutz, which he later gathered into a kind of collage that focuses on her stress.
Leeor Shtainer mourns her two nieces killed at the Nova music festival, while directly across is the diary of Keren Shpilsher, who drew daily what she was watching on the screens and has filled six diaries so far.
There are drawings by Jonathan Chazor, a young soldier killed in Gaza. Perhaps the most painful is a lifelike picture of a dog that he drew on a school blackboard while fighting in Gaza. On another wall is the red-stained works by Ziva Jelin, Be'eri resident and artist, whose works were torn up by shrapnel during the Hamas onslaught.
There is also the vivid, striking video work of photographer Roee Idan, below, killed in one of the horrifying terrorist attacks of that morning near his home in Kibbutz Kfar Aza. His images were among some of the first that captured the attacks on that morning, as he photographed Hamas attackers flying through the air on motorized paragliders before being killed.
A playlist of songs to accompany the exhibit could be heard in the background, with works by Matti Caspi, Eviatar Banai, Idan Amedi, Shlomo Artzi and many others. Their tunes offer a different meaning and form of consolation after the attacks of 7th October.
Finally, a reel of photos played silently, showing soldiers fighting in the kibbutzim, the many funerals and burials, the rallies for the hostages and the faces of their family members.
"October Seventh" is a snapshot of how artists are responding to 7th October. It was a meaningful way to end our visit to Anu – Museum of the Jewish People.

Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs

Monday, 22 July 2024

Twenty Three

It took me a bit longer than I anticipated to share the birthday card I made for my eldest son's 23rd birthday. My blogging schedule is a little off and I only shared his 22nd birthday card in January (his 23rd birthday was the previous November). I am sharing his birthday card now, before his next birthday comes around!
Nadav is a big Arsenal fan. I have mentioned it many times before. His birthday cards since the age of five have all somehow featured football, or more specifically, Arsenal.
This year I showed Nadav and his girlfriend, Hila, wearing Arsenal shirts. They flew to the UK last September to visit our family there and of course managed to squeeze in a couple of games too! My card is loosely based on a photo of the two of them taken at the Emirates Stadium, where they went to see Arsenal vs. Tottenham Hotspur. The final score was 2-2, for those of you who are interested!
You can see the stadium in the background, along with a little aeroplane and a big number 23 to mark Nadav's age. Nadav and Hila were supposed to start several months of post army travel in October, but the war began and they both ended up back in the IDF (Israel Defence Forces) instead. The little plane was to remind Nadav that he would one day get to travel, which I'm pleased to say happened in the end.
As with all birthdays in our home, there was a homemade cake as well.

Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs
PoCoLo

Monday, 15 July 2024

Atara's Album

Atara celebrated her Bat Mitzvah back in April and her mum asked me to create a customized album for the occasion. Atara likes music and dancing, dogs, roller skating, emojis, tacos and Coca-Cola, she told me. 
Atara knew exactly how she wanted to look on the album cover. It was important to her that I show her side bangs (I am not sure what you call them in British English!) and to show her wearing her denim jacket and with lots of bracelets on her wrists. She wanted it to say Atara in English on top and then בת המצווה של עטרה (Atara's Bat Mitzvah) in Hebrew at the bottom. She also requested a cute white dog (like her next door neighbours have) and music notes.
I made sure she got everything that she wanted.
Atara's album opens the Hebrew way, from right to left. I have shown her wearing her favourite denim jacket, with some roller skates slung over her shoulder and a can of Coca-Cola in her other hand. Her hair is loose, with the side bangs shown as requested. Behind Atara is a little white dog, her favourite emojis and a plate with some tacos on it. Truthfully I thought there was already quite enough on the cover, but Atara wanted music notes in the background too. It looks a little busy but it made the Bat Mitzvah girl happy!
I made the background light purple, as Atara requested, and added some music notes in two corners of the album cover. The lettering is silver.
I decorated five pages inside the album as well. The first page has music notes on it, to illustrate Atara's love of dance and music. Next, I made another version of her neighbour's cute white dog, below. This was followed by a page showing a pair of white roller skates, just like Atara's own skates. Another page has emojis on it, then finally, one of the last pages in the album has some tiny tacos and a can of Coca-Cola on it. They are Atara's favourites.
It seems that Atara was delighted with her album. "It's so cute! We love it!" her mum wrote to me.
Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs