South African Jewish Museum

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EstablishedDecember 2000
Location88 Hatfield Street
Gardens
Cape Town
Coordinates33°55′47″S 18°25′01″E / 33.92985829565731°S 18.416979946637067°E / -33.92985829565731; 18.416979946637067
South African Jewish Museum
EstablishedDecember 2000
Location88 Hatfield Street
Gardens
Cape Town
Coordinates33°55′47″S 18°25′01″E / 33.92985829565731°S 18.416979946637067°E / -33.92985829565731; 18.416979946637067
FounderMendel Kaplan
DirectorGavin Morris
Websitewww.sajewishmuseum.co.za

The South African Jewish Museum is a museum of South African Jewish life, history and identity. The museum is situated in the downtown neighbourhood of Gardens in Cape Town. It is located in the grounds of Gardens Shul, and is in the same complex as the Cape Town Holocaust & Genocide Centre and the Gardens Jewish Community Centre (which houses the Jacob Gitlin Library). It is also close to the Iziko South African National Gallery and Houses of Parliament.[1] The museum was founded by the late philanthropist, Mendel Kaplan. It documents the community's historical roots in Lithuania and elsewhere. Thereon it documents the role of South African Jewry in South African society and their contributions to a number of diverse fields.

In 1996, philanthropist Mendel Kaplan made the decision to establish a national museum about the South African Jewish community, funding the project through the Kaplan Kushlick Foundation. The foundation commissioned a new purpose-built museum building, while repurposing the original Old Shul (the oldest synagogue in Southern Africa) as the museum's entrance.[2][3] Since 1958, the Old Shul housed a smaller Jewish museum.[1] The new museum was opened by President Nelson Mandela in 2000, and he was accompanied by Helen Suzman and Mendel Kaplan.[4][1] The Old Shul was the recipient of a grant from US State Department’s Ambassadorial Fund for Cultural Preservation for its renovation.[5] It reopened in 2023, in a ceremony attended by Reuben Brigety, United States ambassador to South Africa.[5]

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