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Current Exhibition

LGBTJews in the Federal City

Participants on the National Mall at the National March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, & Bi Equal Rights & Liberation, April 1993. Lillian and Albert Small Capital Jewish Museum Collection. Gift of Mitch Weissner.

Participants on the National Mall at the National March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, & Bi Equal Rights & Liberation, April 1993. Lillian and Albert Small Capital Jewish Museum Collection. Gift of Mitch Weissner.

Location

  • Capital Jewish Museum
    575 3rd Street, NW, Washington, DC

Tickets

  • $12 Adults
  • $10 Ages 65+ & Students w/Valid ID
  • Free Ages 12 & Younger
  • Free for Members

Purchase Tickets

Explore a turbulent century of celebration, activism, and change

 

This landmark exhibition is the first of its kind to explore DC history, Jewish history, and LGBTQ+ history together, drawing from the Museum’s robust LGBTQ+ archive. Immerse yourself in 200 historical and contemporary photographs, 120 artifacts, and more than a dozen oral histories. Learn about legal milestones, far-ranging protests, change in religious spaces, and vibrant cultural life.

 

In the News

 

“Washington doesn’t suffer for museums about American history. But the city itself is overshadowed by its status as the capital and overlooked by the federal museums along the National Mall. “LGBTJews in the Federal City” may be a destination for tourists visiting for World Pride, but it shouldn’t be missed by locals. The District’s queer Jewish history is vibrant — and still being written.” Kriston Capps, Bloomberg News 

“Legendary names. Historic moments. And some sequins. Bringing queer DC history to life.” Tommy McFly, NBC4 The Scene

“You will leave this exhibit informed and enlightened.” H Alan Scott, Newsweek’s The Parting Shot

Photos from the Galleries

The exhibition is organized into the following sections:

• Introduction & Timeline

Travel from the 1800s through to the current day in five time periods highlighting significant events in LGBTQ+ history with an emphasis on Washington, DC, and the local Jewish experience.

• Lavender Scare & Military Service

In the 1950s and 60s, the so-called “Lavender Scare” kept thousands of LGBTQ+ Americans out of military service and the federal civil service. Discover the work of Washingtonian Frank Kameny in protesting this discrimination.

• Capital Moments

Washington, DC, the federal city, is where laws are made; Congress is lobbied; and protest marches travel between the White House, the Capitol building, and the Supreme Court. What happens in DC affects the entire nation.

• Welcoming Spaces

Discover welcoming spaces across the city over the past century, from guidebooks promoting LGBTQ+-safe businesses across different eras to the dress worn by DC’s turn-of-the-21st-century Jewish drag queen Ester Goldberg.

• Ritual Practice

Learn about changes in prayer language to include nonbinary worshipers, the establishment of LGBTQ+ congregations, and the development of a more expansive liturgy in Jewish religious services.

• Oral Histories

Listen to the stories of LGBTQ+ Jewish Washingtonians, presented in collaboration with the Rainbow History Project.

• Participation Moment

Post your photograph of Jewish LGBTQ+ life in the DC area to our wall.

Featured Objects & Images

Curatorial Team

LGBTJews in the Federal City is curated by Sarah Leavitt, Curator, and Jonathan Edelman, Collections Curator. The exhibition is designed by The Design Minds.

Exhibition Sponsors

This special exhibition is made possible by Premier Sponsor, Jeffrey Z. Slavin and Lead Sponsors, Stuart S. Kurlander and David L. Martin.

Additional support is provided by Major Sponsors: Susie and Michael Gelman; Alfred Munzer and Joel Wind; Christopher Wolf and James Beller; Contributing Sponsors: William H. Davis; Occasions Catering; Shards of Light Foundation; Partner Sponsors: Debbie Goldberg and Seth Waxman; Debbie and Jamie Heller; Craig Hoffman and Albert Lauber; Dr. Stuart Sotsky; and Friend Sponsors: Patrick DiBattista and Alfredo Gomez; Rochelle Granat and Rhoda Schulzinger; Ms. Karen Lehmann; Larry Neff; Craig Pascal; Dr. Robert and Patricia Silverman; Gigi B. Sohn and Lara A. Ballard; and Michael Tubman and Samir Luther.

Media Partner: The Washington Blade

For information about sponsoring the exhibition, please call Malki Karkowsky, Chief Advancement Officer, at 202-290-2593.

Exhibition Peers and Partners

Official Event Partner WorldPride 2025   | Media Partner: The Washington Blade

Related Programs

Participants on the National Mall at the National March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, & Bi Equal Rights & Liberation.

Drop-In Program

Community Day

Saturday, July 5, 2025 10am–5 pm

Public Program

Author Talk with Dr. Jake Desai-Newsome: Pink Triangle Legacies: Holocaust History and the Fight for LGBTQ+ Rights

Wednesday, July 9, 2025 6:30pm–8 pm

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(Virtual Attendance) Author Talk with Dr. Jake Desai-Newsome: Pink Triangle Legacies

Wednesday, July 9, 2025 6:30pm–8 pm

CHRIS FERENZI 2024

Public Program

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Wednesday, July 23, 2025 12:30pm–1 pm

Public Program

CJM After Sunset: After Hours Pride Party

Thursday, July 24, 2025 6–9 pm

Participants on the National Mall at the National March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, & Bi Equal Rights & Liberation.

Drop-In Program

Community Day

Wednesday, August 13, 2025 10am–8 pm

Participants on the National Mall at the National March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, & Bi Equal Rights & Liberation.

Drop-In Program

Community Day

Sunday, September 7, 2025 10am–5 pm

Member Program

Members-Only Preview: LGBTJews in the Federal City

CHRIS FERENZI 2024

Family Program

Family Day: Full of Pride

Sunday, June 22, 2025 9:30am–1 pm

A woman reading to a group of children sitting on the floor during a Story Hour at the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington DC

Family Program

Story Time at CJM: Pride

Thursday, June 12, 2025 10–11 am

Button from Washington, D.C. Pride Day on June 23, 1991. Lillian and Albert Small Capital Jewish Museum Collection. Gift of Michael Garbus

Partner Program

Pride: The Policy Accomplishments of the LGBTQ+ Movement

Thursday, May 22, 2025 8:30am–10:30 am

Black and white photo of the Gay Men's Chorus of Washington DC marching in a parade, date unknown. Courtesy of the Rainbow History Project

Public Program

Gay Men’s Chorus

Sunday, June 1, 2025 1–1:45 pm

Participants on the National Mall at the National March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, & Bi Equal Rights & Liberation.

Drop-In Program

Community Day

Wednesday, June 4, 2025 10am–8 pm