The Jerusalem Post

Shoah memorial stones stolen in Berlin

‘Stumbling stones’ missing ahead of anniversar­y of Kristallna­cht

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The “Stolperste­ine,” or “stumbling stones,” are gold-colored, cobbleston­e-sized monuments embedded in sidewalks in Berlin and other cities in Germany and across Europe.

On Monday, the memorials were dug up and stolen on several streets in the Neukölln neighborho­od, Deutsche Welle reported.

Berlin’s local Stolperste­ine project coordinato­rs wrote on Twitter that the stones will be “replaced as quickly as possible,” the news service reported.

A local politician, Fritz Felgentreu, blamed members of the far Right, noting how close the incident occurred to the anniversar­y of Kristallna­cht, which took place on November 9-10, 1938. He said there is a strong far-Right presence in the neighborho­od.

German artist Gunter Demnig originated the idea for the memorial project in the mid1990s after hearing an elderly woman deny that there had been any Holocaust victims in her town. The stones are placed at the last known address of a Holocaust victim, inscribed with the name, birth date and fate of the person.

Some 63,000 of the stones have been installed across Germany and in other European countries since the project began, Deutsche Welle reported, citing Demnig.

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