Designed by
Title
Museum of the Liberation of Rome, Italy #165035727
Description
Material documenting the deportations in the first floor of the the Museum of the Liberation of Rome in Via Tasso 145 close to the basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome, Italy. In addition to recording the torture that took place on the site it provides information that concerns the details the persecution of Rome`s Jews, with copies of newspaper reports and posters imposing bans and anti-Jewish orders and the deportation the arrest by the SS of 1259 Jewish citizens from the Roman Ghetto in October 1943. In some of the cells writings in pencil on the plaster and other graffiti provide touching messages of life and freedom, often written by prisoners nearing death.[ The building housing the museum was used by the SS to torture members of the Italian Resistance in the first half of 1944. Under Kappler the apartments located on three floors were transformed into a prison, with the rooms being turned into cells. In January 1944 all windows were walled up to facilitate imprisonment, interrogations and torture of some of the most important figures of the Italian resistance, with an estimated 2000 people passing through the building. Following donation of the apartments occupied by the SS to the Italian State in 1950 the museum was established to record the period of German occupation and Rome`s subsequent liberation in 1957.
This image is editorial