(Jewish Group) The Alfred Dreyfus affair shocked Jews in France. Now there's a museum devoted to it. [View all]
French President Emmanuel Macron has inaugurated near Paris what is believed to be the worlds first museum on the wrongful and antisemitic persecution of the late army captain Alfred Dreyfus.
The new museum, inaugurated on Tuesday in the suburb of Médan, features at least 500 documents including photographs, court papers and personal objects from the 8-year ordeal that ended in 1906 with Dreyfus exoneration from trumped-up espionage charges and convictions. Some of the documents are displayed on walls in the main space of the Dreyfus museum, hanging against giant text naming concepts such as Justice, Treason and Innocence. Also on display are copies of antisemitic caricatures that were published in mainstream newspapers in France in connection with the Dreyfus trials.
The Dreyfus Museum is part of the Zola House, a cultural institution devoted to preserving the memory of Émile Zola, the renowned French writer who, though not Jewish himself, had a key role in leading opposition and protests against the injustice done to Dreyfus. Zola had lived in the building where the institution named for him is housed. The Zola House had been closed for renovations for over a decade, and is reopening with the addition of the Dreyfus Museum.
Zolas role in the Dreyfus affair was immortalized in 1898, when he penned an influential article titled Jaccuse, or I accuse. The open letter criticized the persecution of Dreyfus, ostensibly for spying on France for Germany; the captain, Zola wrote, was prosecuted and convicted on scant evidence because he was Jewish. (Following the articles publication, Zola was put on trial for libel and fled the country, living out his remaining years in exile.)
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