Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Holocaust Memorial à Paris 1er dans Paris 4ème

Musée
Musée de la guerre 39-45
Patrimoine Juif
Musée de la résistance et de la déportation
Paris

Holocaust Memorial

    17 Rue Geoffroy-l'Asnier
    75004 Paris

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1943
CDJC Foundation
24 février 1957
Inauguration of the tomb of the unknown Jewish martyr
2005
Opening of the Holocaust Memorial
14 juin 2006
Opening of the Wall of the Righteous
21 septembre 2012
Opening of Drancy's antenna
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Isaac Schneersohn - Co-founder of CDJC Started collecting evidence in 1943.
Léon Poliakov - Co-founder of CDJC Historician engaged in the documentation of genocide.
Éric de Rothschild - President since 2005 Leads the Memorial and its memorial projects.
Jacques Chirac - Former President of the Republic Inaugurated the Wall of Names in 2005.
François Hollande - Former President of the Republic Opened Drancy's antenna in 2012.

Origin and history

The Holocaust Memorial, located in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, is a place of memory dedicated to the genocide of Jews during the Second World War. It gathers a museum on Jewish history during this period, commemorative spaces such as the Wall of Names and the crypt housing the tomb of the unknown Jewish martyr, as well as the Centre for Contemporary Jewish Documentation (CDJC), founded clandestinely in 1943 in Grenoble to collect evidence of Nazi crimes. The current site, inaugurated in 2005, replaces the former Memorial of the Unknown Jewish Martyr (1957) and extends with an antenna in Drancy in 2012, on the site of the former camp internment.

The Wall of Names, inaugurated in 2005 by Jacques Chirac, lists 75,568 Jews deported from France, including 11,400 children. The crypt, designed in 1957, houses ashes of victims of the Warsaw camps and ghetto, symbolized by a star of David and an eternal flame. The Children's Memorial presents 3,000 photographs of deported children, while the Wall of the Righteous, inaugurated in 2006, honours the French who saved Jews.

The Memorial offers temporary exhibitions, educational activities (school visits, teacher training, trips to Auschwitz), and a historical journal created in 1946. It also houses a specialized bookshop and a sound work, Le passage amplified (2008), dedicated to deported children. The CDJC, integrated with the site, maintains 40 million documents, accessible to researchers and the public.

The Memorial has been conducted since 2005 by Éric de Rothschild. Its main access is at 17 Geoffroy-l-Asnier Street, near Saint Paul Metro Stations and Hôtel de Ville. Several films were made there, of which Her name was Sarah (2010) and Les Héritiers (2014), reflecting her role in the transmission of memory.

The Drancy antenna, opened in 2012 by François Hollande, completes this memorial device by marking the location of the main French transit camp towards the extermination camps. The Memorial collaborates with international institutions such as the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and participates in educational projects, including a summer university.

Collection

Le mémorial de la Shoah réunit dans un même lieu :

- Un musée consacré à l'histoire juive durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale dont l'axe central est l'enseignement de la Shoah.

- Plusieurs "lieux de mémoire" : le tombeau du martyr juif inconnu (dans la crypte), le mur des Noms, le mémorial des enfants, et le mur des Justes.

- Le Centre de documentation juive contemporaine (CDJC).

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Ouverture : Horaires, jours et tarifs sur le site officiel ci-dessus.
  • Contact organisation : 01 42 77 44 72