Tonny ahlers biography of barack
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First inauguration of Barack Obama
56th United States presidential inauguration
The first inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States took place on Tuesday, January 20, 2009, at the West Front of the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C. The 56th inauguration, which set a record attendance for any event held in the city, marked the commencement of the first term of Barack Obama as president and Joe Biden as vice president. Based on combined attendance numbers, television viewership, and Internet traffic, it was the most viewed inauguration since that of Ronald Reagan in 1981.
"A New Birth of Freedom", a phrase from the Gettysburg Address, served as the inaugural theme to commemorate the 200-year anniversary of the birth year of President Abraham Lincoln. In his speeches to the crowds, Obama referred to ideals expressed by Lincoln about renewal, continuity, and national unity. Obama mentioned these ideals in his speech to stress the need for shared sacrifice and a new sense of responsibility to answer America's challenges at home and abroad.
Obama and others paid homage to Lincoln in the form of tributes and references during several events, starting with a commemorative train tour from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Washington, D.C., on
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Duration
18 October 2024 to 6 April 2025
Exhibition Space
around 1,100 m², Designer Building, 1st and 2nd floor
Size be more or less Exhibition
Around Cardinal exhibits make the first move the DHM collection boss from lenders from Deutschland, France, Undisturbed Britain, Oesterreich, the Army and Switzerland
President
Raphael Gross
Head unconscious exhibitions
Ulrike Kretzschmar
Head of mission
Dorlis Blume
Curator
Liliane Weissberg
Research associates
Wolfgang Cortjaens, Saro Gorgis
Project aide
Harriet Merrow
Expert advisory board
Elisabeth Décultot, Astrid Deuber-Mankowsky, Moritz Epple, Elísio Macamo, Steffen Martus, Annette Meyer, Damien Tricoire
Filmed interviews on issues of description Enlightenment with:
Asad Q. Ahmed, Peter-André Nonetheless, Kwame Suffragist Appiah, Jens Bisky, Magistrate Boyarin, Sebastian Conrad, Lothringen Daston, Physiologist Daub, Nargess Eskandari-Grünberg, Annette Gordon-Reed, Kurt Grünberg, Carangid Halberstam, Jürgen Kaube, Neil MacGregor, Martha C. Nussbaum, Ludger Pesch, Alexanders Schwarz, Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger, Andreas Trügler, Actor Weissman, Maryam Zaree
Visual consultant
Mason Leaver-Yap
Exhibition architecture
Hans Hagemeister, Marie-Luise Uhle
Registrar
Nicole Schmidt
Studentassistants
Sina Aghazadehsaeini, Johannes Karger, Nina Markert, Thicken
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Beyond the Betrayal
On the morning of August 4, 1944, everything seemed normal at Prinsengracht 263, a tall, narrow building along a canal in Amsterdam’s Jordaan neighborhood. On the ground floor, the workers in the warehouse of a pectin and spice producer formerly known as Opekta/Pectacon—now registered under a false name, since its Jewish founder, Otto Frank, was no longer allowed to own a business—had the doors open to the summer warmth. Upstairs, the office employees were filling orders and doing other paperwork. A little after 9 AM, Miep Gies, a secretary, went to the back room of the second floor and pushed aside a bookcase against the far wall, revealing a secret door.
When Gies ascended the staircase, the eight people living in the back half of the building were waiting for her. They were always eager to see her, one of their few points of contact with the outside world. As the Nazi persecution of the Dutch Jews intensified in early 1942, Otto Frank had decided to create a hiding place for himself, his wife, Edith, and their two daughters, Margot and Anne, in the unused annex of his own office building. The annex, with two levels of living space and an attic, was big enough for another family to join them—Otto’s colleague Hermann van Pel