The Museum of Tolerance aims to become a home that inspires and encourages open dialogue for Israelis and a place for outreach activities for guests from around the world. The museum's design includes four open walls that produce an illuminated space for visitors throughout their visit, creating a sense of comfort and warmth, and helping them open up to ideas and absorb the content.
The museum features temporary exhibitions which you can book tickets, and will soon feature a fascinating permanent exhibition that will introduce visitors to the journey of Diaspora Jews, an AI hologram of Maimonides, and more.
In addition, you can enjoy performances and live music in the amphitheater and halls of the museum, join fascinating events, and hold private events and conferences.
The museum includes a 185,000 square meter campus, which includes an innovative cultural center for experiential learning in the heart of modern Jerusalem, a Beit Midrash that hosts groups, and more.
The Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem is also suitable for a variety of events and conferences. One of the museum's most striking features is the 1,000-seat outdoor amphitheater, surrounded by a Second Temple period aqueduct originally built by King Herod. In the center of the amphitheater stands a low stage, from which a screen and speakers rise as if by magic at the touch of a button.