I unfortunately could not make it to the trip but I will be visiting it sometime soon in the future. What is great about the museum website is the amount of information that you can look at before your visit to get a picture of what you will be experiencing. What’s interesting is that they have an authentic German Railcar as well as a Danish rescue boat which are both Juxtaposing symbolically with one representing extermination and the other representing freedom. There are also many other unique artifacts that the museum possesses including old headphones as well as a Monopoly game made in the Theresienstadt ghetto in 1943. But one of the most real and chilling parts of the website is how you can listen to oral accounts from survivors and also read witness testimonies through the museums’ official collections. It is a far different experience to hear from people who experienced this horrific event in person versus reading about it in a textbook. Museums are some of the most important resources that we have available and we should never take them for granted. To actually see pictures and real artifacts from the concentration camps brings a surreal and different sense of reality vs just reading about it online. It’s incredibly saddening to see that people still try to either downplay or just completely deny that this horrific genocide took place. Anti Semintism is still extremely prevalent in the world today and there is still much work to be done if we want any meaningful changes in the future. This museum does not just spread awareness of the holocaust, it also spreads awareness of genocide and prejudice as it has an exhibit on the genocide in Burma as well. I am very eager to someday go to this museum. There is so much value from having access to places like this and I’m very grateful that we happen to be so close to it.