Hate Ends Now: The Cattle Car Exhibit Comes to Austin

The Jewish Outlook

Mar 1, 2024

Community members and visitors enter the Cattle Car exhibit, which made a two-day stop on the Dell Jewish Community Campus in Austin Feb. 8-9. Credit: Rebecca Golden

The Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio, Anti-Defamation League (ADL)-Austin and Shalom Austin were honored to bring Hate Ends Now: The Cattle Car Exhibit to the Dell Jewish Community Campus in Austin, Texas on February 8 and 9.

This unique 360-degree video exhibit, which was fully booked in Austin, brings history to life, teaching visitors about the devastating consequences of intolerance, bigotry, and hate. The exhibit is an immersive, multimedia presentation that takes place inside an exact replica of a cattle car used to transport Jews and other targeted groups to concentration camps during World War II. Visitors engage with history through video and audio remembering the Holocaust and featuring survivors’ testimonials.

Community members and visitors view Holocaust artifacts as part of the Cattle Car exhibit, which made a two-day stop on the Dell Jewish Community Campus in Austin Feb. 8-9. Credit: Rebecca GoldenThe program progresses through history, culminating in how hate and intolerance persist today.  The ultimate message is one of empowerment, reminding visitors to stand up against ignorance, intolerance, and hate. The exhibit also includes a display of authentic artifacts from the Holocaust and WWII.

On opening day in Austin, community leaders were invited to a private reception featuring speakers: Shalom Austin CEO Rabbi Daniel A. Septimus, Jewish Federation of San Antonio President and CEO Nammie Ichilov, ADL-Austin Regional Director Jackie Nirenberg, and Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio Director Leslie Davis Met.

The exhibit is operated by Hate Ends Now, a nonprofit 501c3 organization dedicated to Holocaust education. The tour is presented by the Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio, thanks to title sponsors: Lubetzky Family Foundation, Texas Holocaust, Genocide, and Antisemitism Advisory Commission, and the Texas Historical Commission.

This traveling Holocaust education exhibit has also visited San Antonio, Corpus Christi, McAllen, Laredo and other cities across the country.

More information is available at hmmsa.org/hate-ends-now.

Latest Posts

It’s Finally Here! Dell JCC Opening Soon Welcomes Everyone

It’s Finally Here! Dell JCC Opening Soon Welcomes Everyone

Member Experience Team welcomes members to new state-of-the-art fitness center at the Dell JCC. Credit: Jolie Estes  By Allison Teegardin Originally built in 2000, the Jewish Community Association of Austin, which later became Shalom Austin, quickly established itself...

Little Rookies Are Building Community With Each Bounce

Little Rookies Are Building Community With Each Bounce

Little Rookies and coaches building team enthusiasm on the court. Credit: Mark Pattis By Mark Pattis  Basketball is back at the Dell JCC in the form of Little Rookies youth basketball! After a multi-year hiatus due to COVID-19 and the Generations project construction,...

JGallery: Thin Space Sparks the Viewer’s Imagination

JGallery: Thin Space Sparks the Viewer’s Imagination

Thin Space artists, Leslie Kell, Rebecca Bennett, Elena Lipkowski. Credit: Iris Bartov  By Susan Sternberg  Thin Space: Transcending the Ordinary opened at JGallery on Tuesday, January 24 from 7-9:00 p.m. with a reception and artists talks showing slides and video of...