From Home to
Home: Jewish Immigration to America
A fully interactive traveling exhibition for school age children
This intelligent and
beautifully crafted exhibition examines immigration through child-oriented
entry points and captivating problem-solving activities. The fun-filled
curriculum-based exhibition enhances the study of Immigration, American
History, American Jewish History and Diversity.
In the 28 interactive
stations of the exhibition, visitors explore five phases of the
immigrant experience: Why Move? Where to Go? What to Take? New Beginnings,
Helping Each Other, Change and Influence.
They use a scale to weigh
tangible arguments for staying or leaving, peek into miniature dioramas
of life in distinct time periods and places, and participate in
a family conversation at a dinner table in Germany in the wake of
the Nuremberg Laws.
Visitors look at a variety
of materials that illustrate the pull of America, and pretending
to be immigrants, create their own postcards to influence relatives
and friends to follow them to America.
Packing scaled-down objects in trunks, visitors decide which possessions
are truly important to them, and then explore the reasons for which
particular possessions were brought along by the immigrants.
Once in America, visitors
shop in a supermarket in which everything is written in a mysterious
code and packaged in unfamiliar boxes. They try to fit a family
of ten into a small apartment that doubles as a work place, and
peek into miniature dioramas again, this time to see scenes of life
in the new country.
Visitors build their
own neighborhoods and decide on the character of the community through
a democratic process.

Visitors dress immigrant
children in their new clothes. Just like real advertisers, they
add Jewish elements to local products to make them more attractive
to Jewish immigrants, and "Americanize" products brought
along by the immigrants from their countries of origin.
Scrolls with illustrated
stories of four famous immigrants exemplify the contributions of
immigrants in the areas of economy, science, art and social change.
An additional station
provides the host institution with space for artifacts and documents
contributed by members of the community.
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