Please Note: Proof of COVID-19 vaccination is required for participation on all tours; additionally, current CDC and Smithsonian COVID-19 guidelines (at the time of the tour) will be followed.
Washington, D.C., has been the stage for pivotal events in our nation’s history for more than two centuries. It has also become the repository of an entire nation’s memories through the creation of monuments and memorials.
Join staff members of the new Capital Jewish Museum on a walking tour that explores the connection between the city’s monuments and collective memory. Begin at the home of the museum—where the historic 1876 Adas Israel synagogue, the District’s first purpose-built synagogue, is the focal point of the site—then move through the heart of the historic downtown Jewish community. Along the way, visit monuments and memorials connected to local and international Jewish history, viewed through the lens of the Jewish value Zachor, or memory. Highlights include memorials dedicated to the victims of Communism, the Ukrainian famine known as the Holodomor, and Japanese American citizens during World War II.
Additional Dates
General Information
- Registration for this tour will end by 2 p.m. ET on Friday, October 21, 2022.
- The tour meets at the corner of 3rd and F Street, NW in Washington, DC.
- Each tour covers approximately 2 miles. Limited street parking.
- Meet-up location is close to the Judiciary Square Metro station (Red line; F St./National Building Museum exit)
- For additional tour information: