Nov 1 Museums@Noon – Traces of Memory at the Galicia Jewish Museum
Traces of Memory at the Galicia Jewish Museum
Ekaterina Olson Shipyatsky (MSP 22; PhD Candidate, Political Science; Copernicus Center for Polish Studies Dissertation Fellow 2024-25)
November 1 from 12:00 – 1:00 pm
Hatcher Gallery Lab, Room 100H
Before the Holocaust, Poland was home to approximately 3.3 million Jews – making it the world’s second-largest Jewish community. By the end of World War II, Nazis and collaborators had succeeded in killing over 90% of Poland’s Jewish population, about three million people. Most survivors emigrated, but an estimated 90,000 remained – only to be expelled in large numbers through an antisemitic, government-run campaign in 1968.
Traces of both the vibrant Jewish community that once lived in Poland – and the violence that killed and expelled so many of them – are visible in today’s contemporary Polish landscape: synagogues that are now furniture stores, doorframes that once held mezuzot, overgrown Jewish cemeteries. The Galicia Jewish Museum, located in Kazimierz, the pre-Holocaust heart of the Kraków Jewish Community, exhibits photographs of these traces. In doing so, the museum aims to complicate a narrative of Polish Jewish history that usually begins and ends solely with Auschwitz.
In this talk, I share some of my experiences interning at the Galicia Jewish Museum this summer. Drawing on my experience giving tours of the museum’s permanent exhibition and working in the museum’s education department, I’ll discuss the tangles of remembering the Holocaust in Poland and the complex landscape of Jewish institutions in Kraków. Institutions like the Galicia Jewish Museum, I’ll argue, offer us an opportunity to reflect on the politics of memory museums, urban museology, and the decisions that face those who live among traces of genocidal violence.
Ekaterina Olson Shipyatsky is a PhD Candidate in Political Science (Political Theory) and the Museum Studies Certificate Program. She is also a Copernicus Center for Polish Studies Dissertation Fellow 2024-25. Her research focuses on the politics of memory in museums, memorials, and archives of violence in Poland and North America. Ekaterina received her A.B. in Philosophy, Politics, Economics from Bryn Mawr College in 2019 and was a 2019-2020 Fulbright Fellow in Russia.