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Busting the myths about money

A new exhibition at the Jewish Museum explores the difficult subject of Jews and money

March 13, 2019 15:41
The charity wheel from Aldgate's Great Synagogue

ByKeren David, Keren David

4 min read

Tell Jewish people that the Jewish Museum’s next major exhibition is on the subject of Jews and money, and you get winces, grimaces and sharp intakes of breath. Is this really what we need, right now, as antisemitism poisons our politics, not just in Britain but across Europe too? “What were you thinking?” is my first question for Abigail Morris, the museum’s CEO, and I’m only half joking.

It’s not the first time she’s been asked this, it’s clear. Patiently she stresses the amount of thought and care that has gone into every aspect of this project, developed in collaboration with the Pears Institute for the study of antisemitism at Birkbeck, University of London; pointing out the parallels with a previous exhibition on Jews and Blood. What’s more, the title is Jews Money Myth, with the emphasis very much on examining and dismantling the myth element.

“Antisemitism is not going away. Not talking about it doesn’t mean it isn’t there,” she says, reasonably. “As a museum, we can offer the long view. We give people the chance to learn and find out. We’re shedding light into dark and tricky areas.”

When she says dark, she means it. Some of the images and artefacts are “very grown up”, she says. They include a grotesque statue from 1833 of a Rothschild, and a detailed caricature from the same period, purporting to show the Rothschild family’s global influence, with money flowing to and from business and government endevours around the world. The ugly image is all too reminiscent of internet memes today.