The exhibition presents a diverse collection of over 100 artefacts from across Europe, organised into six central themes and presented along a chronological timeline.
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00A traveling exhibition exploring the history of fake news and forgery has opened in Budapest.
00:07The interactive collection, put together by the House of European History,
00:11reveals that the concept of fake news has existed for centuries,
00:16from the forging of sacred relics to the invention of conspiracy theories.
00:22We start the exhibition with a practice of antiquity,
00:27which was called the condemnation of memory.
00:30It was a practice by which they tried to erase people from history.
00:35And the exhibition ends in this location in Budapest
00:40with an additional case study added by our host, the Open Society Archives,
00:45which looked at the case of Imre Nagy
00:49and how his name was purged from history until 1989.
00:54The interactive nature of the exhibition allows visitors to become fact-checkers themselves,
00:59with screens which allow them to decide which news to censor or publish.
01:04The collection also explores cases in history where forgery was used for good.
01:09During the Holocaust, for example, thousands of lives were saved by fake identity cards and passports.
01:15The exhibition is open until the 16th of February.