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Learn more about available offers and programs, events, and public tours, or buy a ticket online for your planned visit. To reduce your wait at the Jewish Museum Berlin to a minimum, we recommend reserving a time slot ticket from our online ticket shop in advance.
However, walk-in tickets are also available at the ticket desk. Please reserve yours before your visit from the online ticket shop. Rosh ha-Shanah. Over 20 million men, women, and children were taken to Germany and the occupied territories from all over Europe as "foreign workers," prisoners of war, and concentration camp inmates to perform forced labor. By , forced laborers were part of daily life in Nazi Germany.
The deported workers from all over Europe and Eastern Europe in particular were exploited in armament factories, on building sites and farms, as craftsmen, in public institutions and private households.
Be it as a soldier of the occupying army in Poland or as a farmer in Thuringia, all Germans encountered forced laborers and many profited from them. Forced labor was no secret but a largely public crime. The exhibition "Forced Labor. The Germans, the Forced Laborers, and the War" provides the first comprehensive presentation of the history of forced labor and its ramifications after The exhibition was curated by the Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora Memorials Foundation and initiated and sponsored by the "Remembrance, Responsibility and Future" Foundation.
Federal President Christian Wulff has assumed patronage for the exhibition. We cordially invite you to attend the press conference and the opening of this exhibition on Monday 27 September There will be a photo opportunity with the Federal President in the exhibition for press photographers and TV teams.