Monument to the Memory of Children - Victims of the Holocaust
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (April 2018) |
Pomnik Pamięci Dzieci – Ofiar Holokaustu | |
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52°14′43″N 20°58′36″E / 52.24527°N 20.97656°E | |
Location | Jewish Cemetery, Warsaw, Poland |
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Designer | Jacek Eisner |
Dedicated to | Jewish children murdered in the Holocaust |
The Monument to the Memory of Children - Victims of the Holocaust is a monument located in the Jewish cemetery on Okopowa Street in Warsaw, Poland, commemorating the children murdered in the Holocaust.
Description
[edit]The monument was founded by Jacek Eisner. Its form refers to the high wall of the ghetto with barbed wire, to which plates, arranged in the shape of a menorah, lead. Ruins of the ghetto were placed at the bottom of the monument, on the surface of which are photographs of Jewish children who died during World War II. There is a plaque underneath it written in three languages: Polish, Hebrew and English, with the following content: To the memory of one million Jewish children murdered by German barbarians 1939-1945. The photographs include a picture of a girl in checkered clothes and a hat depicting Lusia, the daughter of Chaskiel Bronstein, the owner of the Fotografika photography studio in Tarnów, mentioned by Paweł Huelle in a short story Mercedes Benz.
The monument also contains: a symbolic grave of the Szteinman family, murdered during the Holocaust, and two commemorative plaques:
- the first in Polish, Hebrew and English that reads: Grandmother Masha had twenty grandchildren. Grandmother Hana had eleven, only I survived. Jacek Eisner.
- the second one in Polish, Hebrew and English with the text of Mały Szmugler (The Little Smuggler), a poem by Henryka Łazowertówna.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ "Warszawa | Wirtualny Sztetl". sztetl.org.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 16 April 2018.