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Holocaust museum says it need more room for 'life changing' exhibits

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  • Holocaust museum says it need more room for 'life changing' exhibits

    At a Crossroads

    Holocaust museum says it need more room for its 'life changing' exhibits

    By Paul Logan
    Staff Writer, Albuquerque (New Mexico) Journal
    Jnue 6, 2005

    Keith Smith of Bedford, England came to the New Mexico Holocaust
    & Intolerance Museum because friends said it was a must see.

    After viewing the newest exhibit on black slavery, Smith said the
    little Downtown Albuquerque museum is a permanent reminder of what
    hate can cause.

    "Ignorance of what happened in the past will cause us to repeat
    these terrible tragedies in the future," Smith said.

    "We see it in parts of Africa...where one group becomes
    marginalized for any reason, and they become easy targets for
    destruction."

    The museum is in a modest storefront next to the KiMo Theatre on
    Central, but its supporters hope it will become a big-time player.

    "We've reached the crossroads," said museum president Andrew
    Lipman.

    The museum wants to move from its 3,100-square-foot building to
    another, much larger location in the Downtown area. A site has not
    been selected, but Lipman said the goal is to move in two years.

    He said the museum will soon receive $985,000 approved in the
    last legislative session. That money--along with the potential for
    additional state funding in the future--will help to plan, design,
    purchase and equip a new site. Lipman said the museum has received
    "very strong" support from the governor, mayor and the Downtown Action
    team.

    Werner Gellert, a museum founder, said the exhibits set the place
    apart from other venues worldwide. They reflect American Indian
    cultural genocide, Armenian and Greek genocide, the Bataan Death march
    and the Holocaust. Gellert, a Jew whose family fled Nazi Germany in
    1939 hopes a new site will have space to honor the 5 million non-Jews
    who were killed by the Nazis. The Nazis killed about 6 million Jews.
    There will also be an exhibit on the gulag, a Soviet system of
    forced-labor camps that caused the deaths of about 3 million from 1931
    to 1953.

    Alfredo Achecar, formerly of the Dominican Republic and now of
    New York City, is considering a move to Albuquerque. He said he
    "stumbled across" the museum. "It exemplifies a lot of those social
    struggles and social dynamics of oppressed minorities," Achecar said.

    Lipman said that about 6,000 people visit the museum annually.
    More than 600 students came in April. The museum has received grant
    money to provide buses for school field trip transportation. It also
    sends information packets on dealing with intolerance to schools
    statewide.

    "We have young kids that come here and they're speechless, they
    cry, they get angry, they're very affected by the museum as are the
    adults," Lipman said.

    Fifth-grade students from Carroll Elementary in Bernalillo sent
    thank-you letters after their museum visit. One student wrote that the
    museum "helped our class understand how terrible the Holocaust and
    Armenian genocide were." Another note said, "It changed my life."
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