Jewish Unpacked: The Stumbling Stones. The largest decentralized Holocaust memorial in the world

Stumbling stones: The largest decentralized Holocaust monument in the world

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Updated Apr 28 2022 04:00PM EDT

Generally, we keep our eyes up while walking, but sometimes, what we need to see is below our feet— that’s what I learned while visiting Budapest in the winter of 2022, when a small, shiny brass plaque on the ground caught my eye. 

Perfectly embedded between the street’s cobblestones – easy to miss – the plaque was at the foot of a modest apartment building a short walk from the Hungarian Parliament.

In Hungarian it read:

Here lived:

Adler Ignac

Born 1896

Murdered in the spring of 1944

My friend who was living in Budapest at the time clued me in:

The unassuming plaque is one of approximately 90,000 brass memorial plaques meant to commemorate victims of the Holocaust. Known as Stolpersteine, German for “stumbling stones,” the plaques are laid at the entrance of the homes where individual victims of the Holocaust once lived before being viciously rounded up by the Nazis. https://www.youtube.com/embed/Mh5eAvgxpus?feature=oembed

The inscription on each stone begins “Here lived,” followed by the victim’s name and any known information about them, including date of birth and their fate, which in the vast majority of cases, is deportation and murder.

Together, the Stolpersteine constitute the largest decentralized monument in the world, honoring the memory of victims who, in most cases, do not have the dignity of graves.

The idea was first conceived by German artist Gunter Demnig in 1992.

The Nazi’s wanted to “exterminate people, turn them into numbers and erase their memory,” Demnig said. He wants to reverse this process and return individual names to places where people once lived. 

Citing the Talmud, Demnig said: “A person is only forgotten when his or her name is forgotten.” 

The Stolpersteine are meant to cause a mental “stumbling” that forces pedestrians to reckon with the past.

Stolpersteine in Rome, Italy. (Photo: Kolten Kudrinko)

To date, Demnig has laid over 90,000 stones in more than 1600 cities and towns across Europe, Russia and Ukraine. He personally oversees the wording and installation of each one – a task which apparently kept him on the road for 300 days a year prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The project is not only about the victims and their fates,” he said, “but about the installation of the stones which commemorate them.” 

Demnig insists that each stolpersteine be made by hand. He no longer has time to make them himself, so sculptor Michael Friedrichs-Friedlaender crafts each stone in his Berlin studio.

“To show respect for the victims, it must be done by hand,” Friedrichs-Friedlaender told The Guardian. “The Holocaust was so systematic. What they invented as means of mass slaughter, it was more or less automatised. We don’t want anything like that.”

The craftsman engraves each stone by hand, letter by letter, with a hammer and hand-held metal stamps. 

Despite its international scope, Stolpersteine remains a grassroots initiative. Often, local groups – such as residents of a particular street or students working on a project – come together to research the biographies of local victims, and raise the 120 euros it costs to install each stone. 

Most recently, students in Brussels organized teams of volunteers to clean all 458 Stolpersteine in the city in advance of Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) as a part of a campaign called “Make Their Memory Shine.”

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Terry

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