Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience
About this Organization
MSJE is the only Jewish museum in the country to focus specifically on the Southern experience. Since opening in 2021, over 36,000 visitors have walked through the doors with thousands more participating in virtual public programming.
MSJE has hosted nearly 200 public programs since opening in 2021. Highlights from the past year include an alumni panel of Rosenwald School graduates from Louisiana, a talk about Stanley Stein who was a patient at the leprosarium in Carville, Louisiana, and a week-long celebration of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot that featured a structure built by Tulane School of Architecture students.
Running through January 2026, the new special exhibition, "Most Fortunate Unfortunates: The Jewish Orphans' Home of New Orleans" explores this unique institution and the legacy it left for thousands of Jews across the South.
The newly opened Chapman Family Research Center is a hub for archival preservation and digitization, secure collection storage, an oral history studio, and a reading room and reference library where museum staff help the public research their roots.
MSJE has hosted nearly 200 public programs since opening in 2021. Highlights from the past year include an alumni panel of Rosenwald School graduates from Louisiana, a talk about Stanley Stein who was a patient at the leprosarium in Carville, Louisiana, and a week-long celebration of the Jewish holiday of Sukkot that featured a structure built by Tulane School of Architecture students.
Running through January 2026, the new special exhibition, "Most Fortunate Unfortunates: The Jewish Orphans' Home of New Orleans" explores this unique institution and the legacy it left for thousands of Jews across the South.
The newly opened Chapman Family Research Center is a hub for archival preservation and digitization, secure collection storage, an oral history studio, and a reading room and reference library where museum staff help the public research their roots.