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  • Tolerance Museum Director Doesn't Tolerate Status Quo

    TOLERANCE MUSEUM DIRECTOR DOESN'T TOLERATE STATUS QUO
    By Elyse Glickman

    The Jewish Journal of greater L.A
    http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/preview.php? id=19389
    May 15 2008
    CA

    Liebe Geft tours Museum of Tolerance with Lord Carey of Clifton,
    Archbishop of Canterbury emeritus, and other religious leaders after
    conference at the museum this month. Photo: Bart Batholomew. Courtesy
    Simon Wiesenthal Center.

    The Museum of Tolerance is rarely the same experience twice, even
    with its permanent exhibits. New visuals, soundtracks and materials
    are added to keep the displays current and relevant. And while many
    people think of the museum as a "Jewish" institution, it is the "human"
    experience that touches upon issues that affect visitors of all ages
    and ethnic backgrounds.

    While incorporating technology and an interactive environment
    into the museum experience was the vision of Simon Wiesenthal
    Center founder and dean Rabbi Marvin Hier, the constant editing and
    improving of collections and programs reflect the mind of Liebe Geft,
    a former broadcast journalist. Ten years after she assumed the role of
    executive director at the Pico-Robertson-adjacent Museum of Tolerance,
    she exhibits the same passion for and commitment to presenting current
    events as she did when she was on the air.

    Geft has not only maintained this well-oiled machine, but kept its
    chief products -- an impact-making, interactive museum and broad-based
    community programs -- in consistent supply, navigating the flow of
    societal and economic changes.

    "Right now, you can say that everything is new at the museum,"
    she said.

    Since it opened in 1993, the Museum of Tolerance's efforts to "confront
    the dynamic of intolerance that is still embedded in society today"
    has attracted more than 300,000 people each year; one-third of the
    visitors are school-age children.

    Permanent exhibitions include the Tolerancenter, which encourages
    visitors to consider intolerance in daily life; the Holocaust exhibit,
    a tour that recounts the events leading up, during and after the
    Shoah; and Finding Our Families, Finding Ourselves, a collection of
    personal histories from notable Americans, including Maya Angelou,
    Billy Crystal and Carlos Santana.

    For the Tolerancenter's exhibit called the Point of View Diner, Geft
    is currently working on a way to deal with the national epidemic of
    bullying, an important issue that affects many children. She's also
    revising a script on terrorism for the museum's Millennium Machine,
    the second post-Sept. 11 revision, which will look at dangers we face
    from nontraditional forms of potential terrorist attacks.

    "Everything that goes into this museum is meant to be a trigger for
    discussion and debate ... a stimulus to raise awareness about the
    issues that are difficult but need to be confronted collectively and
    individually. Although many of the exhibits are permanent, we now have
    a commitment and an obligation to make sure all exhibits are relevant
    and current. If they aren't, they are not going to be meaningful,"
    she said.

    Even the well-received and established Holocaust exhibit is constantly
    updated so visitors can personalize history and make it relevant to
    their lives today. It's also being altered to make way for a new a
    new Youth Action Lab.

    New sections were recently opened in the Tolerancenter, with the
    largest project, the History Walk, offering a different perspective
    on the history of the United States, from the 1600s to the present,
    reflecting on issues of diversity, intolerance and moving toward a
    just society.

    What all the exhibits have in common, according to Geft, is that they
    are designed to actively engage people and amplify their own voices,
    down to polling stations and exploration displays.

    "I feel like my coming here was quite fortuitous, and I credit Rabbi
    Meyer May, who extended the opportunity to me," said Geft, recalling
    the museum's former executive director. "The biggest attraction
    about the position, however, was the potential and enormity of the
    challenge. It represented an opportunity to create a program that was
    highly innovative in many respects and had the promise of really making
    a difference, especially as we are promoting human dignity and mutual
    respect for one another in our society. It is a very noble mission,
    and something I could not resist."

    Geft grew up in Zimbabwe, in a Jewish family rich in humanistic values,
    where tolerance and respect for other humans was a day-to-day reality
    rather than a series of do's and don'ts, and speaking up on issues
    that mattered was encouraged constantly. Exposing herself to different
    cultures and viewpoints strengthened the values that tie in with her
    upbringing and her late father's credo, "If man is pleased with man,
    God is pleased with man."

    Her natural curiosity about the world took her to England and Israel
    for university study and work, and from there into careers in broadcast
    journalism and education.

    What Geft embraced most about her earlier work was her ongoing
    ability to take what she learned on the job and pass it on to her
    audiences. Her time at the Financial News Network (which later
    became CNBC) stands as a pivotal career experience, especially with
    the innovative ways news was researched, reported and relayed to
    viewers worldwide.

    In 1996, she brought her skills and experience to the Museum of
    Tolerance as director of the Tools for Tolerance for Professionals
    program, developing curricular materials like the "Teacher's Guide
    for the Museum of Tolerance" and workshops for hundreds of thousands
    of teachers, law enforcement officials, and municipal employees.

    By 1998 she had assumed the responsibilities as the museum's
    director. From the beginning, she dedicated up to 80 hours a week
    building the museum's outreach and educational programs, adding new
    interactive exhibitions and landmark exhibitions that kept it current
    and relevant.

    "It is very gratifying to go to work every day when the focus of your
    job is to make the world a better place, through the hearts and minds
    of everyone we interact with," she said.

    Geft is proud of the fact that she is leading people of all ages
    and walks of life down a path of enlightenment, from schoolchildren
    to professional adults. But her path to and around Los Angeles in
    itself has been a journey of discovery. While her dream -- and that
    of her husband -- is to live in Israel, Los Angeles and the Museum
    of Tolerance have proven themselves to be part of a rich detour that
    has reinforced the values Geft has known since childhood. Or as she
    puts it, "Life has a strange way of thwarting best-laid plans."

    "Los Angeles has an amazing Jewish community, of which we are very
    proud to be a part," Geft said, noting she has raised five sons here.

    According to Geft, the city is an ideal locale for the Museum of
    Tolerance since it represents a "veritable microcosm of a macrocosmic
    global world," where residents trace their roots to 140 different
    nationalities and the city is home to the largest Armenian, Korean,
    Filipino, Salvadoran and Guatemalan populations outside their
    respective capital cities.

    "This city is a true social laboratory, and it's a perfect fit for
    an institution designed to be on the cutting edge of social change,"
    she said. "I recall when there was a scare of poisonous strawberries
    in the Los Angeles Unified School District, letters were sent home to
    parents in more than 100 different languages. There is no better place
    to be when you're looking to build bridges of mutual understanding
    and cooperation between different groups."

    Los Angeles is also a great home for the museum, not surprisingly,
    because of its proximity to major players in the entertainment industry
    at both the celebrity and corporate levels. Although Geft is adamant
    in pointing out that every visitor to the museum and participant in
    its social programs are VIPs, she observes her institution gets a
    major boost through the support of public figures.

    "There are many important [Hollywood] players closely associated with
    Simon Wiesenthal Center, especially because our work is congruent with
    their causes and the charities that they embrace," she said. "They
    have the power to influence, and we are fortunate to have many of
    them coming to the museum."

    Prior to a Museum of Tolerance preview of the 2007 film, "A Mighty
    Heart," an adaptation of Mariane Pearl's memoir on the search for
    her husband, kidnapped Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl,
    star Angelina Jolie toured the museum and watched a short documentary
    titled, "In Our Time," which covered terrorism and Pearl's death.

    "After that, she recalled that her first visit to the museum in middle
    school made a profound impression on her," Geft said of Jolie.

    In the Hilary Swank film, "Freedom Writers," teacher Erin Gruwell
    takes her students to the museum to get them thinking about tolerance.

    "When celebrities make these kinds of statements, direct or otherwise,
    it really piques the interest of people," she said.

    According to Geft, the principles the museum was built on will continue
    to be reflected in upcoming visiting exhibitions, which will cover such
    diverse topics as the Jews of modern China, Mexican diplomat Gilberto
    Bosques' efforts to rescue Jews from Vichy France during World War
    II and the struggle toward desegregation and equity in schools --
    from Brown v. The Board of Education to the present.

    Not surprisingly, bringing these exhibits to light will involve many
    hours and a lot of patience. Thankfully, Geft notes the support of her
    family enables her to do good and do well. And she says her patience
    and support pays off with every person impacted by the thought put
    into the permanent and temporary exhibits and the messages they convey.

    "My professional life is not, 'I used to do this, but now I do that,'"
    she said. "It is a continuation of everything I have done my whole
    life, exploring new frontiers and finding new challenges to take on."

    For more information on upcoming exhibitions and the museum, visit
    www.museumoftolerance.com.
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