Holocaust museum opens in Skokie, Ill.


SKOKIE, Ill. (AP) — Thousands of people attended the opening Sunday of a $45 million Holocaust museum in this Chicago suburb perhaps best known for an aborted march by neo-Nazis decades ago.

The 65,000-square-foot Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center is considered the largest of its kind in the Midwest and features 2,000 survivor testimonies, most of them from nearby residents.

“We don’t want the only people learning to be in Washington, New York and Los Angeles,” former President Bill Clinton, the keynote speaker for the opening, told the crowds gathered under tents in the rain. “I think it is important that this place of remembrance and learning is here, not only because of what happened in Skokie three decades ago but because it is in the heartland of the country.”

Skokie, once home to thousands of Holocaust survivors, garnered international attention in the 1970s when neo-Nazis threatened to march in the streets.

Museum executive director Richard Hirschhart said the aftermath of the incident was an “epiphany of sorts” for survivors, who were inspired to share their stories.

Organizers said the museum’s goal is to tell the story of the Holocaust, help survivors heal and prevent future atrocities.