Saturday 15 December 2012

Perpetuating the Holocaust myth through Street cobblestones

As part of the Stolpersteine project, German artist Gunter Demnig installs memorial cobblestones at the front entrance of the residence where a Holocaust victim last lived before being deported by the Nazis.

Artisans Rainer Schuette, left, and Michael Friedrichs-Friedlaender prepare brass plaques at the Stolpersteine manufacturing studio in Berlin. The Stolpersteine project, launched by German artist Gunter Demnig in 1995, commemorates victims of the Holocaust. Demnig installs the stones into the sidewalk at the front entrance of the residence where the victim last lived before being deported by the Nazis. Demnig has installed more than 30,000 stones all across Europe at the request of families of victims or local authorities. Stolpersteine translates to "stumbling stones."
Artisan Michael Friedrichs-Friedlaender hammers inscriptions into brass plaques at the Stolpersteine manufacturing studio in Berlin.
Hammering inscriptions into brass plaques at the Stolpersteine manufacturing studio in Berlin.
Nearly finished cobblestones lie on a worktable at the Stolpersteine manufacturing studio in Berlin.
Final Solution
Gunter Demnig lays memorial cobblestones outside a residence in Hamburg, Germany.
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