Plan your Visit To Yad Vashem
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Sun-Thurs: 08:30-17:00
Fridays and holiday eves: 08:30-14:00
Saturday and Jewish holidays – Closed

Yad Vashem is open to the general public, free of charge. All visits to Yad Vashem must be reserved in advance.

Remarkable Film Discovery Highlights Yad Vashem’s New Collections Center

Yad Vashem conservationists have recently made a significant discovery. The expert staff at the David and Fela Shapell Family Collections Center, part of Yad Vashem's Mount of Remembrance in Jerusalem, have managed to recover a series of photographs from a film canister documenting pre-Holocaust life of an Austrian Jewish family. These photographs, rescued through groundbreaking preservation methods, have restored once-irretrievable negatives. The images, captured by Hans Erich and Karla Lebel, accompanied the couple as they fled Austria in 1939, just before the outbreak of World War II. This visual archive not only survived their harrowing escape, but has now been brought back to life, offering a poignant glimpse into a world on the brink of catastrophic change.

Hans Erich Löbel’s film projector, which he took with him when escaping Austria. He also brought two reels of film that he shot in Vienna in the 1930s.
Hans Erich Löbel’s film projector, which he took with him when escaping Austria. He also brought two reels of film that he shot in Vienna in the 1930s.

Hans Erich Löbel’s film projector, which he took with him when escaping Austria. He also brought two reels of film that he shot in Vienna in the 1930s.
Hans Löbel’s passport
Hans Löbel’s passport

Hans Löbel’s passport
Carla Löbel’s passport
Carla Löbel’s passport

Carla Löbel’s passport