Agenda of exhibitions and events

Book launch on July 4th


America

Missing Peace Art Space, Dayton, USA

Dayton International Peace Museum, USA

Asia

Kyoto Museum for World Peace, Ritsumeikan University, Japan

Australia

Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, Sydney, Australia

Europe

Nobel Peace Center, Norway

Friedensmuseum Nuernberg, Germany

Gernika Peace Museum, Spain

Henry Dunant Museum, Switzerland

International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum, Switzerland

Humanity House, The Netherlands

Museum voor Vrede en Geweldloosheid (Museum for Peace and Nonviolence), The Netherlands

Netherlands Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies (NIOD)

The Peace Museum, England

* exhibitions and events are not placed in any particular order of importance.
INMP is not responsible for accuracy of postings. Pleace check the INMP Associate’s website for the latest information.

Yi Jun Peace Museum, The Netherlands

The Yi Jun Peace Museum preserves a historical Korean site and the works of Yi Jun, commemorates his death during The Hague Peace Conference in 1907, and provides education on peace and justice.

The Yi Jun Peace Museum was formerly known as De Jong Hotel, at the time of the second Hague Peace Conference (15/6/1907 – 18/10/1907). During the conference, the Korean patriot Yi Jun stayed at this hotel with the mission to attend the conference, and to protect Korea from Japan’s attempt to annexation. Yi Jun however, failed to gain admittance to the conference due to Japanese objection. On the morning of 14 July 1907. Yi Jun was found dead in his hotel room, cause unknown and mysterious…
In remembrance of Yi Jun, the museum is maintained as a historical monument. After renovations of the hotel building, the Yi Jun Peace Museum was opened on 5 August 1995.

Wagenstraat 124a
2512 BA, The Hague, the Netherlands
yijunpeacemuseum@hotmail.com

+31 70 356 2510

 

Women4Nonviolence, Norway

Women for Non Violence in Peace and Conflict Zones is designed to inform civilian and military survivors of gender-based violence about the welfare of those affected, especially in armed conflict and unstable regions of the world. The main vision is to create a survivors’ network and working committees aided by communication platform to bridge Northern and Southern region survivors of SGBV.

The Women4Nonviolence website was created initially in response to both civilian and mililtary survivor groups who wished to catch up on the latest developments regarding UNSCR 1325 on women, peace and security (and allied resolutions) and their impact at The Hague. The site also intends to facilitate communication with its users globally to initiate and to catalyze positive action.

www.w4nv.com
bkawamura@w4nv.com

Oslo, Norway +47 97 00 28 19

London, United Kingdom +44 07752 411458

Honolulu, Hawaii +1 808 627 5772

Tokyo, Japan +81 090 3676 1079

Tehran Peace Museum, Iran

The Tehran Peace Museum promotes a culture of peace, by offering awareness programs about the consequences of war. The museum coordinates a peace education program that holds workshops on humanitarian law, disarmament, tolerance, and peace education. At the same time, it hosts conferences on the culture of peace, reconciliation, international humanitarian law, disarmament, and peace advocacy.

Currently housed in a building donated by the municipality of Tehran within the historic city parc, the Tehran Peace Museum is as much an interactive peace center as a museum. The Iranian secretariat of the international organisation Mayors for Peace is also housed in this building. Additionally, the museum maintains a documentation centre for the individual stories of victims of warfare and its library includes a collection of literature spanning topics from international law to the implementation of peace to oral histories of veterans and victims of war.

North Gate – Parke Shahr
Tehran, Iran
www.tehranpeacemuseum.org

Stichting Cast Lead, The Netherlands

Cast Lead is an art initiative opposed to violence. Its weapons are theatre, the arts and common sense. They aim to connect current manifestations at excessive violence to cities that have been the target of horrific bombardements themselves and have found a way of commemorating these events in a special way.

Amsterdamse Veerkade 84
2512 DJ, The Hague, The Netherlands
www.ingridrollema.nl
www.theatreofwrongdecisions.eu
www.castlead.eu
ingrid.rollema@rollema.nl

Studio

Lepelstraat 1, The Hague, The Netherlands

Plea for Peace Project and Musical, South Africa

The Plea for Peace Project and Musical is an initiative to promote nonviolence as the option towards conflict resolution and understanding, in pursuit of lasting and sustainable peace. It comprises of:

  • a musical: a set of poetic writings about Mahatma Gandhi, Nobel Peace Prize laureates and peace activists set to music, performed by school children;
  • an online petition, calling for the Norwegian Nobel Institute to declare Mahatma Gandhi Honorary Nobel Peace Laureate;
  • several peace clubs for students and teachers to learn about historical, political and social aspects of Nobel Peace laureates and peace activists, and to promote a lifestyle of nonviolence.

The Peace Clubs achieve their goals by various activities, such as the monthly celebration of a peace laureate or activist. During each month they research that person’s life and background, and reflect on their own lives. The clubs are already operative in a number of high schools in Cape Town. Internationally, informal collaborations have started with individuals and institutions in Colombia, Israel, Palestine, Mexico and USA.

www.pleaforpeaceproject.wordpress.com

Peace Museum Vienna, Austria

Peace Museum Vienna attempts to conduct peace education through the lives of its Peace Heroes. These heroes include historic as well as contemporary figures who spent their lives either promoting peace through their profession such as Johan Galtung or practiced peace and nonviolence as their main strategy for a peaceful life such as Mahatma Gandhi or Nelson Mandela.We plan to extend our peace education efforts to schools in Vienna.

We intend to expand our initiative “Windows for Peace” to a minimum of 20 cities and include 5000 Peace Heroes worldwide by 2020.

Peace Museum Vienna
Blutgasse 3/1
1010 Vienna, Austria
Liska Blodget –  Founder and President of Peace Museum Vienna   +43 676 644 8191   liska.blodgett@peacemuseumvienna.com
Ali Ahmad –  Director of Peace Museum Vienna   +43 664 942 1387  ali.ahmad@peacemuseumvienna.com
Wilfried Janko –  Board member of Peace Museum Vienna   +43 699 152 75003   wjanko@peacemuseumvienna.com

www.peacemuseumvienna.com

Nobel Peace Center, Norway

The Nobel Peace Center presents the Nobel Peace Prize and its ideals. It is an arena where culture and politics merge to promote involvement, debate and reflection around topics such as war, peace and conflict resolution.

The center presents the Nobel Peace Prize laureates and their work, in addition to telling the story of Alfred Nobel and the other Nobel prizes. This is done using multi media and interactive technology (for which it has achieved international recognition), exhibitions, meetings, debates, theater, concerts and conferences, as well as a broad educational program and regular guided tours.

The Nobel Peace Center current exhibitions are included in our exhibitions section.

Radhusplassen
Oslo, Norway
www.nobelpeacecenter.org
post@nobelpeacecenter.org

+ 47 48 30 10 00

My Peace Palace Collection – The Hague, The Netherlands

My Peace Palace Collection started in 2005, when Vincent Stittelaar scoured flea markets, antique shops and the internet for any item connected to the Peace Palace in The Hague. The collection currently holds more than 1000 objects, varying from kitchen ware and textile to various books, boxes and all kinds of souvenirs. Stittelaar is still collecting new memorabilia and wants to participate in and organise exhibitions.

On the Peace Palace Centenary (28 August 2013) the website was launched as a virtual Peace Palace Museum. The aim is to share this collection of Peace Palace memorabilia, including knowledge about both Hague peace conferences, with anyone who is interested, and eventually to build a Hague peace museum that would educate about The Hague’s historical judicial roots as International City of Peace and Justice.

www.mypeacepalacecollection.com
info@mypeacepalacecollection.com

Museum voor Vrede en Geweldloosheid, The Netherlands

The Museum voor Vrede en Geweldloosheid (Museum for Peace and Nonviolence) is a virtual museum on the internet. Their address in Delft houses a small museum, open on appointment only. Since 1 July 2013, the museum also operates a permanent exhibition space inside the Resistance Museum South-Holland.

They promote a culture with less violence, through the use of travelling exhibitions in libraries, schools, major houses and museums. Their museum shop among other things sells games that promote cooperation instead of competition.

The museum works with volunteers and has 500 supporters. Twice a year they publish a newsletter entitled De Vredesboot (The Peaceboat).

The Museum voor Vrede en Geweldloosheid travelling exhibitions and current exhibitions are included in our exhibitions section.

Vlamingstraat 82
2611 LA Delft, The Netherlands
www.vredesmuseum.nl
info@vredesmuseum.nl

Tel : 015-785.01.37

Resistance Museum

Turfmarkt 30
2801 HA Gouda, The Netherlands
www.verzetsmuseum-zh.nl