The Jewish Museum London is a museum of Jewish life and art in the London Borough of Camden, on the northern fringes of central London, England.
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The museum was founded in 1932 in the Jewish communal headquarters in Bloomsbury. In 1995, it moved to its current site in Camden Town. Until recently it had a sister museum in Finchley, operated by the same charitable trust and sited within the Sternberg Centre. This branch closed in 2007. The Camden branch reopened in 2010 after two years of major building and extension work.[1] The £10 million renovation was funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and private donations.[2] The museum is a registered charity.[3]
The museum houses a major international-level collection of Jewish ceremonial art including the notable Lindo lamp an early example of a British Menorah (Hanukkah).[4] The new building includes a gallery entitled "Judaism: A Living Faith", displaying the museum's noted collection of Jewish ceremonial art. This collection has been awarded "designated" status by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council in recognition of its outstanding national importance.[4] The Museum's Holocaust Gallery is made up of items and filmed survivor testimony from Leon Greenman, who was one of the few British subjects to be interned in the death camps section at Auschwitz.
The museum also has exhibitions recounting the history of Jewish life in England, supported by a diverse collection of objects. There are also collections of paintings, prints and drawings, and an archive of photographs, which consists mainly of black and white photographs from the 1900s to the 1940s.