Sony built a big building here and has a unique cover over the plaza outside their building that they light up in different colors at night.
One item on our list that we hadn't gotten to before was the Holocaust Memorial, correctly called The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. It consists of a field (19,000 square meters) of 2,700 concrete blocks and the information center below. The idea is you go through the information center first and it exits you to the center of the field of blocks. We did it backwards but I'm not sorry we did.
We arrived and I headed straight to the blocks. They are smaller on the edges and move to bigger ones in the center. WOW. Walking through the maze was powerful. I really didn't have any particular thoughts, one way or another, as I started out except to take some pictures, but the deeper I got into that maze of blocks, the stronger my feelings got. It built slowly but I had such strong emotions after a few rows that I felt them overwhelm me. It was like a sense of sadness crept into me from the feet to the heart. It wasn't despair exactly, but I couldn't ignore it and I still am weepy just trying to describe it. I'm not sure my reaction would have been the same if I'd gone through the information center first. I might have been better prepared after the displays, maybe not, but that place just drew out raw emotion from me.
The information center is a little different also, and goes through 6 rooms. The first exhibition (room) is an overview of the "national socialist terror policies" (what I call Nazi policies) from 1933 to 1945 and describes with words and pictures how the approach to the Jewish "problem" started, changed, and spread. The second room has actual diary entries, letters, and final notes from victims written during that period. The third room focuses on 15 families with personal pictures and notes, and what happened to family members. They are from various countries to illustrate how widespread the genocide attempt was. The fourth room calls out individual names and short biographies of murdered and missing Jews from across Europe. The fifth room represents the Holocaust in its geographical entirety across all of Europe with maps and examples of specific extermination locations (not all were camps). The last room has computer terminals where you can look up memorial sites, interviews of survivors, and other info.
| Exiting the info center into the blocks |
| The top of the stairs puts you here |
Wow, I can't imagine. It's emotionally provocative even seeing photos. I don't understand how anyone could ever think this is pure propaganda and the holocaust is a hoax.
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