The exhibition is the first exhibition of an international GH7 expert group of historians from seven countries in the United Nations, 72 years after the Second World War, and whose head and director is Gideon Greif, a world-renowned expert for Auschwitz, Majdanek, Jasenovac and Zonderkomandose.
The coordinator of the Serbian-Jewish academic project "Jasenovac" is Ambassador Ljiljana Niksic, and the cooperation is based on the Memorandum of Understanding signed by the Ministry of Education of Serbia and the Holocaust Institute Shem Olam on 28 March 2017 with the aim to jointly organize exhibitions, scientific conferences and education programs on Jasenovac.
The exhibition represents a modest contribution to the preservation of the universal values of humanity and the global efforts of the UN in order to prevent the onset of the revision and rehabilitation of neo-Nazi and neo-fascist ideologies of exclusion and all forms of discrimination and fanaticism.
This exhibition represents the support of UNICEF efforts to protect the most vulnerable category of population by fostering the right of the child to a happy childhood, bearing in mind that Jasenovac was a camp for children.
The main goal of the exhibition is to foster a culture of remembering the Serbian, Jewish, Roma and anti-fascist victims of the Holocaust and genocide in Jasenovac, one of the most brutal and most notorious of eight extermination camps in World War II.