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Telling the stories of Holocaust Survivors and their families, Cincinnati’s Nancy & David Wolf Holocaust & Humanity Center museum inspires reflection with 7,500 of exhibit space. The design collaboration of Michael Berenbaum and Edward Jacobs, and JRA, connected local history with this tragic, as more than 1,000 survivors of made their way through the very doors of the museum at the Cincinnati Union Terminal with incredible insight from local survivors. Many of those survivors are honored and highlighted within the gallery, as are the contributions they have made in the community.Holocaust Humanity Center 1

The Holocaust Gallery and the Humanity Gallery comprise the new museum space. There are also two educational theaters named “Winds of Change” and “Points of Light.”  A 63-foot wall mural, created by local artist Keith Neltner and his Camp Springs, Kentucky-based design group, Neltner Small Batch accompanies other art installations including a bullet casing mural done by USA’s Tessa Meier called “Massacre.” Interactive and immersive exhibits in each gallery were centered around specific related themes such as “War,” “Survival,” “Resistance,” “Concentration,” “Escape.”

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