Why it matters: this is a Holocaust museum built with money that belonged to the victims. In 2002 the government made the Holocaust Fund of the Jews of Macedonia – directed by the Jewish community itself – the legal recipient of heirless Jewish property, and the roughly 25.6 million dollars of restitution paid out between 2009 and 2018 financed this center, which opened in 2011 in Evrejsko Maalo, the old Jewish Quarter it commemorates. The subject is the 7,148 Macedonian Jews, some 98 percent of the community, rounded up in March 1943 and deported to Treblinka. The permanent exhibition, opened in 2019, traces two millennia of Sephardic life in the Balkans before it gets to the deportation, and includes a section on Ladino as it was spoken here – do not skip it to reach the Holocaust rooms, because the loss only lands if you have seen what was lost. Practical tip: it sits directly behind the Museum of the Macedonian Struggle, two minutes from the Stone Bridge, and it is closed on Mondays.
Good to know
Samoilova 2 - Holocaust memorial museum - Tue-Sun, closed Mondays