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Permanent exhibition

Asia

Asia hall: practicing religion

In the summer of 2024, the Asia Hall was redesigned. This hall explores how people in West, Central and South Asia practice religion. Through religion, people can find meaning in life. They often do this through connection to places, such as a river or shrine; to objects, such as books, icons and statues; and to people, such as saints and holy figures. During silence in meditation, as well as through movement in processions and circumambulations, people express their devotion.  

Redesigned

In a religious experience, it is sometimes fitting to leave your own surroundings and go on a journey. Many people participate in pilgrimages to pilgrimage sites such as Jerusalem or the tombs of Sufi saints, which in South Asia are visited by followers of different faiths. These pilgrimage sites are a connecting point where people of different cultures or faiths come together. They travel for blessings or purification, for better self-awareness or to connect with history and community. People also travel to visit a spiritual person such as a monk or yogi. These spiritual teachers give guidance and sometimes sacred sites are created around them. 

In past centuries, people often collected from a Eurocentric view; collectors saw Judaism and Christianity as religions practiced in Europe. Therefore, they did not consider it relevant to collect in West Asia.  
 
Today, the museum is trying to make collections related to religion more diverse. This room has been redesigned to make visitors think about how people in West, Central and South Asia practice and experience religion in their daily lives. 

The redesigned hall is again open to the public. 

If you want to browse the online Asia collection, click here.

 

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