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Jewish Object: Judaica Collection

Triangular bronze candlestick with a relief-like figurative representation.

Chanukah candelabra by Erna Weill, USA, according to signature 1936; Jewish Museum Berlin, photo: Roman März. Further information about the object can be found in our online collections (in German).

The museum’s collection includes a diverse range of three-dimensional objects, from simple everyday objects and mass-produced commodities to unique items that showcase sophisticated artistic design. In the context of a Jewish museum, these objects become “Jewish objects” be it through the self-definition of their previous owners or curatorial perspectives. 

Range and Spectrum

With our collection of religious objects, we document Jewish history and culture through ritual and everyday items. Biographical, socio-historical and material aspects play a key role in these objects and their interpretation. Many of them express the complexity and diversity of German-Jewish belonging and experiences. 

The core of the collection is the private collection of Münster cantor Zwi Sofer, which the Berlin Museum acquired in 1981. Recent scholarly findings on this were published as part of a provenance research project from 2017 to 2019.

Who is Zvi Sofer?

Zvi Sofer (1911–1980), cantor, and collector, born in Podolia, 1929 Aliyah, academic studies in Vienna, in 1938 re-emigrated to Palestine, from 1959 dedication to the revival of Jewish communities in Germany

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Chronological and Geographical Framework

German-Jewish ceremonial objects from the eighteenth century onward reflect Jewish religious practice and cultural exchanges with their surrounding environments. The spectrum of handcrafted pieces extends from artistic silverwork from the eighteenth century to objects created by amateurs in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

The collection also includes comparative pieces from other countries as well as a growing number of contemporary ceremonial objects, mostly from Israel and the United States. 

Window of a prayer room with the Star of David of the Israelitische Vereinigung von Lichtenberg und Umgegend e. V. in the Frankfurter Allee, 1905; Jewish Museum Berlin, donation, mediated by the Verein für Berliner Stadtmission (Association for Berlin City Mission)

In this film, made as part of our exhibition on the First World War in Jewish Memory, Michal Friedlander, curator of Judaica and Applied Arts, presents two Torah pointers donated to a British and an Algerian synagogue.

How can I conduct research using the museum’s archive, collections, and library?

Our Reading Room is open to the public. You can also research using our library’s holdings and some of our collection’s holdings online. To view additional holdings, please contact the responsible curators.

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How can I donate objects, photographs, and documents to the museum?

Do you own materials related to Jewish culture and history in Germany that could be of interest to us? We would be delighted to hear from you!  

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I would like to depict or borrow an object from your collections. Who should I contact?

Your contacts for photo permissions are Valeska Wolfgram and Birgit Maurer-Porat (T +49 (0)30 259 93 433, email: fotodoku@jmberlin.de). Please consider that it may take between four to six weeks  Please note that the processing time for requests can take between 4 and 6 weeks. We will be happy to provide you with further information on fees and reproduction conditions on request.

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Abstract painting in blue, black and yellow tones

Our Collection

An overview

Details

Digital Content

See also

Links to topics that may be of interest to you

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