By
Joel Leyden
Israel News Agency
Jerusalem
--- October 6, 2008...... As one walks across the pristine,
green campus of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, you can feel
that you are slowly being absorbed back into the richness of
Jewish history. What you do not expect is that this colorful,
vibrant history is about to shake both mind and soul.
Walking
into the Blue and White Pages - Documenting the History of Israel
exhibit in the Youth Wing of the Israel Museum, you immediately
lay your eyes upon two worn, hanging wall flags.
One
is the red and blue Union Jack of the United Kingdom, the other
the Israel flag. But what makes these flags just a bit special
is that this Union Jack was the last English flag to be flown
in English occupied Haifa, Palestine and that the Israel flag
was the first to be raised at the United Nations one day after
the US recognized Israel as State in 1948.
Then
as you make a right turn into the Blue and White Documents exhibits
room, colorful nominations for Israel's first flag and the Israel
state emblem appear. As you come to the end of that wall another
dark wall with dim light falling upon the elegant, encased plastic
display boxes illustrates the "Israel Heroes Wall"
with a surviving diary page from Israel Astronaut Ilan Ramon
and a blood stained "Song of Peace" lyrics page, one
for which Yitzhak Rabin was reading from minutes before he was
assassinated.
"I
was trembling as I held Israel Declaration of Independence in
my hand," Ido Bruno, Curator of the Blue and White Pages:
Documenting the History of Israel told the Israel News
Agency.
"I
am a cynical person," said the 45-year-old Jerusalem born
designer and curator.
"Paper and documents do not really impress me, but being
face to face with such historic, exciting and important content,
I could only manage to utter a 'wow'.
Looking
at the Rabin document or the Ramon diary page, one cannot really
say that the Israel Declaration of Independence is more or less
important. But as a curator one has to make a choice as to what
the audience will see. You have to make a choice. There is a
line when it is a simple document or something that becomes
voyeuristic? As Yigal Amir's gun for which I saw and was offered
to place on display, I said I do not want this here. This is
not a theme park - I do not want those props."
Bruno,
who with 4 professional and dedicated staffers, are assisting
to put together what will be the most powerful, cultural exhibit
ever to be placed on display in Israel.
Bruno
says that the Israel
Museum had an idea of what the Israel National Archives
wanted to show. They had approached the Israel Museum and the
Museum then approached the Knesset, which decided that the historic
and highly emotional exhibit should not take place in the halls
of the Knesset but rather in the Israel Museum, which has easier
access and better facilities for such a colorful and potent
display.
Igal
Zimona, the Chief Curator of the Israel Museum then initially
approached Bruno for the for Blue and White Pages exhibit and
shortly afterwards asked if he would also take on the responsibility
as curator.
Ido
says that the job of a curator is one who is placed in full
responsibility for the content, concept - choosing pieces -
and all the time placing content in and out of the exhibits
as it slowly gives birth.
"I
have worked on this Israel 60th anniversary exhibit for over
5 months while still working on 2 other exhibits at the Israel
Museum," says Bruno.
With
regard to the IDF US Astronaut Col. Ilan Ramon diary exhibit,
Ido says that Ilan's wife Rona was given the diary by NASA which
was found in a field in Texas two months after it fell to earth.
A
search team had found the 37 pages sitting there and knew immediately
that it came from the shuttle. The papers had a NASA cover on
it. NASA then gave these personal affects to Rona Ramon. Rona
then approached the Israel Museum forensics team and asked the
museum if they could restore the diary. Israel Museum restorator
Michal Magen spent months working on Ilan Ramon diary, painstakingly
taking the delicate pages and piece by piece restored over 80
percent of the diary.
The
diary survived extreme heat in the explosion, extreme atmospheric
cold, and then "was attacked by microorganisms and insects"
in the field where it fell, said museum curator Yigal Zalmona.
"It's
almost a miracle that it survived it's incredible,"
Zalmona said. There is "no rational explanation" for
how it was recovered when most of the shuttle was not, he said.
The
diary took about a year to restore. It then took Israel police
scientists about four more years to decipher the pages. About
80 percent of the text has been deciphered and the rest remains
unreadable, he said.
Ilan
Ramon, a fighter pilot for the Israel Defense Forces, was selected
as a Payload Specialist on the Space Shuttle Columbia by the
Israeli Air Force in 1997 and approved by NASA in 1998. He reported
for training at the NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston in
July 1998 and was making his first space flight. Ramon and six
other crew members were killed during a re-entry accident over
Southern Texas. Ramon is a recipient of the US Congressional
Space Medal of Honor.
The
diary describes in fine detail Ramon's day from first waking
up and brushing his teeth, to witnessing how beautiful the Earth
appeared, to the many experiments he worked on and then washing
himself before going to sleep. Much of diary remains personal
and in the possession of his wife Rona.
"Ilan wrote his diary using three instruments. An expensive
NASA pen, a simple pencil and a felt tip marker," says
Bruno. The first two lasted but the words written with the felt
marker were washed out by rains and weather as it laid on the
ground in Texas. You can easily the Kiddush prayer for which
Ilan wrote and read back to Earth in this exhibit."
Ramon
diary is one of 4 people highlighted on the "Cultural Hero
Wall." Av Shalom Feinberg, a freedom fighter against the
Turks for the British, along with Anwar Sadat where a movie
depicts his visit historic and peaceful trek to Israel. The
Peace agreement, signed by Begin, Sadat and Carter. And the
blood stained "Song of Peace" lyrics page that Yitzhak
Rabin kept in his jacket pocket all stand next to one another.

After singing
this "Song for Peace" in Tel Aviv, Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin folded this lyrics page and placed
it in his jacket pocket. Minutes later a Jewish assassin's bullet
murdered the war hero and peace maker.
Photo: Israel Museum
Other
documents on display at the Israel Museum include the original
Israel Declaration of Independence, foreign passports thrown
away by immigrants as they landed in Israel, the diary of Nazi
mass murderer and holocaust creator Adolf Eichmann and even
an order by the Israel government revoking "lashing"
prisoners as a form of modern punishment.
"We
were looking for documents - as compared to conventional sculpture,
paintings and archeology, seeking original documents which strengthen
the link between the national archive and the Israel Museum,
Bruno tell the INA.
For
me personally, the most impressive piece on display is a small
note that David Ben-Gurion wrote ordering as to who was to attend
a State dinner. Gurion wrote that all teachers and writers were
to be invited. At first he also included artists but then crossed
that word out. What Ben-Gurion was saying was nothing less than
paramount to what consisted of Israel culture at the time. Teachers
and authors were held in the utmost esteem. Respected above
all else. Today, teachers in Israel must go on strike just to
secure a paycheck which can buy them food. They should be at
the top. It is sad to see their change in status. Education
is everything."
When
asked if the recent trip and concert by former Beatles member
Sir Paul McCartney was of greater cultural consequence of the
present exhibit, Bruno responded: "There is no competition.
They are both great and both stand on their own very special
and cultural aspects."
Bruno
said that the purpose of the Blue and White Pages exhibit was
"to show and illustrate a deeper view of the connections
between historical events and documents, and how we can learn
from the processes and the connection and Israel culture today".
"This
is far from being a boring exhibit where mundane papers are
placed on display," said Bruno. This is no yawning experience.
For each and every person who sees the exhibit their faces light
up, tears swell up and fall. You can't leave this exhibit without
feeling goose pimples and a sense of tremendous pride from where
we all come from."
The
Israel Museum is the largest cultural institution in the State
of Israel and is ranked among the leading art and archaeology
museums in the world. Founded in 1965, the Museum houses encyclopedic
collections, including the most extensive holdings of biblical
and Holy Land archaeology in the world. In just forty years,
the Museum has built a far-ranging collection of nearly 500,000
objects thanks to a legacy of gifts and the support from its
circle of patrons worldwide.
The
uncontested stars of the Museums collection are the Dead
Sea Scrolls, the oldest biblical manuscripts in the world. Housed
in the white and fountain sprayed Shrine of the Book, the scrolls
date from the 2nd century BCE to the 1st century CE and include
books of the Hebrew Bible as well as other non-canonical texts.
The Shrine of the Book also houses rare early medieval manuscripts
of the Bible, an auditorium and an information and study center.
One
of the most recent and exciting additions to the Israel Museum
is the Second Temple Era model of Jerusalem. The model reconstructs
the topography and architectural character of the city as it
was prior to 66 CE, the year in which the Great Revolt against
the Romans erupted, leading to the eventual destruction of the
city and the Temple. Originally constructed on the grounds of
Jerusalems Holyland Hotel, the model is now a permanent
feature of the Israel Museums twenty-acre campus, adjacent
to the Shrine of the Book.
Counted
among the finest sculpture gardens of the twentieth century,
the Museum's Billy Rose Art Garden, designed by the Japanese-American
sculptor Isamu Noguchi, is a synthesis of different cultures
- those of the Far East, the Near East and the West - against
the backdrop of Jerusalems dramatic landscape. The collection
displayed in the garden includes works by the great sculptors
Menashe Kadishman, Henry Moore, Claes Oldenburg, Pablo Picasso,
Auguste Rodin and James Turrell, among others.
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