Secret videos taken by political dissident Harry Wu and his wife during their 1991 trip to China, China’s oppressive Laogai forced labor camps are exposed. These videos and pictures are the first documented evidence seen by the West. Testimonies of Laogai survivors give a glimpse of the tragedies that befell the Chinese at the hands of Mao and CCP.
Admission is free and the museum is open on Saturdays from 10-5, and Monday through Friday from 10-6. We are conveniently located two blocks from the Dupont Circle metro.
If you have any questions, feel free to visit our website, email us, or phone at (202) 408-8300.
“The DC Jazz Jam has provided a tremendous boost to DC’s indigenous jazz scene. [The] cadre of fine musicians at Dahlak have managed to create a warm, inviting, encouraging, and creative environment at their weekly jam sessions, which is no small accomplishment. Experienced professionals, like myself, attend the jam to relax, stretch out musically, and network with other players. But at the same time, the DC Jazz Jam has proved to be the perfect setting for younger talent to come out, and have some of their first experiences playing in front of an audience and to learn their craft in the laboratory of a nurturing jam session. In this manner, the DC Jazz Jam is but the latest chapter in Washington’s long history with America’s classical music, jazz.”