Since the early 1990s, Berlin has developed what I call a “Holocaust trail“-circa twenty-five officially dedicated memorial sites recalling significant historical events leading to the Final Solution-without acknowledging it yet as a “trail.“ Berlin is already well known for its two famous museums-memorials: the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe (2005) and the Jewish Museum (2001), two strong statements meant to show how the town deals with the heritage of the Holocaust, how it tries to underline the absolute impossibility of its erasure from social memory and to fight revisionism. The different memorial sites of the Holocaust trail came into existence thanks to multiple initiatives that allowed the town to become a true laboratory for the politics of memory concerning the crimes of the Nazi state and the sufferings of the Jewish citizens that fell victim to the state's genocide.
Search Results
Walking Memory
Berlin's “Holocaust Trail“
Maria Pia Di Bella
Book Review
Koen Stroeken
that of a child raising his hands under the pointed gun of a German soldier. An important theoretical tool is the author’s reference to the Stolpersteine in the streets and sidewalks of Berlin, cobbles with brass plates whose engraved names