(Jewish Group) Prague's Jews build monument out of headstones plundered under communism
Members of the Jewish community of Prague, the Czech Republic, attend the unveiling of a monument made of Jewish headstones at a local Jewish cemetery, Sept. 7, 2022. (Courtesy of the Jewish Community of Prague)
During and after the decimation of Eastern Europes Jewish populations in the Holocaust, even the dead were not spared: Locals, their Nazi occupiers and their communist rulers looted Jewish cemeteries for headstones and used them to pave roads and build countless public buildings, including schools, park pavilions and even churches.
On Sept. 7, the Jewish community of Prague in the Czech Republic unveiled a new monument at its cemetery in an attempt to undo some of the damage. The monument consists of about 6,000 cobblestones made from Jewish headstones that were used in 1987 to pave Pragues Wenceslas Square, the national broadcaster Česka Televize reported. The municipality handed over the stones to the Jewish community in 2020, after the stones were removed during renovations.
The community commissioned artists Jaroslav and Lucie Rona to build the monument, which cost about $32,000 and comprises a mound surrounded by nine blocks made up of the cobblestones. Although letters in the Hebrew and Roman alphabets can be seen on some of the stones, no individual headstone used to make the cobblestones was identified, according to the report.
In a speech at the unveiling ceremony, Frantiek Bányai, the chairman of Pragues Jewish community, called the paving stones a symbol of barbarism, rudeness and archaic ruthlessness. The Jewish Cemetery in ikov, where the monument titled Return of the Stones was unveiled, was among the many Jewish cemeteries whose land was stolen under communism. Authorities built a television antenna on part of the cemetery, in violation of the Jewish traditions laws against disturbing places of burial.
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