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Thursday, November 27, 2025 |
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| The New York Historical presents a powerful new exhibition, The Recordings: Voices from the Shoah Tapes |
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Audio cassette tapes from the Lanzmann Collection. Jewish Museum Berlin, photo: Roman März.
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NEW YORK, NY.- This November, The New York Historical presents a powerful new exhibition, The Recordings: Voices from the Shoah Tapes, on view November 28, 2025 March 29, 2026. An exhibition of the Jewish Museum Berlin, it features a special audio installation offering selections from the recently uncovered archive of Shoah (1985), Claude Lanzmanns groundbreaking documentary about the Holocaust.
Hearing the voices and personal stories of those who survived the Holocaust will, we hope, provide a vital history lesson to a new generation, said Dr. Louise Mirrer, president and CEO of The New York Historical. In the context of rising antisemitism today, The Recordings offers a powerful example of how quickly the perspective that Jewish people and their faith are to be superseded can seep into a nations political consciousness, then drive violence on the world stage. We are grateful to the Jewish Museum Berlin for partnering with us as we bring the important early recordings from the Shoah archive to a New York audience.
At the end of 2021, the Association Claude et Felix Lanzmann (A.C.F.L.), represented by Dominique Lanzmann, donated Lanzmanns audio archive to the JMB, said Hetty Berg, director of the Jewish Museum Berlin. This now forms our Lanzmann Collection, which we have been working on cataloguing ever since. Since 2023, The Lanzmann Collection, together with Shoah, was designated part of the worlds cultural heritage by UNESCO. The exhibition Claude Lanzmann: The Recordings, invites visitors to a special listening experience: selected original recordings follow Lanzmann's research and provide insight into the multi-layered memory of the Shoah in the 1970s.
The Recordings: Voices from the Shoah Tapes is an exhibition of the Jewish Museum Berlin (JMB), curated by Tamar Lewinsky, and coordinated for The New York Historical by Valerie Paley, senior vice president and Sue Ann Weinberg director of the Patricia D. Klingenstein Library, and curatorial scholar Keren Ben-Horin. The installation presents for the first time selections from the audio archive of Shoah (1985), the landmark documentary by French journalist and filmmaker Claude Lanzmann (1925-2018). Together with the film, this archive was added to UNESCOs Memory of the World Register in 2023. The larger collection comprises 152 previously unknown cassette tapes, documenting conversations Lanzmann and his assistants held throughout the 1970s during the years-long research process that preceded filming.
The recordings capture preliminary interviews with survivors, perpetrators, and bystanders of the Holocaust, offering rare insight into the genesis of Shoah while also preserving a remarkable collection of non-standardized eyewitness testimony. Presented on the centenary of Lanzmanns birth, the installation underscores the enduring power of memory, testimony, and the preservation of voices from history. The recordings are part of the JMB collection and will be fully accessible online by 2027.
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