The "stumble stones" of Oslo: memorials to Norway's Holocaust victims.

AuthorSmith, Nina Brambani

Text:

Although it has been almost 70 years since it ended, WWII still haunts us, as it should, lest we forget or minimize what happened to the millions and millions who were tortured and murdered by the gruesome regimes of Stalin and Hitler. Millions of survivors and descendants - descendants like me -- born in Europe after the war ended, have lived to grow up with strong personal reminders of the horrors inflicted on our fellow human beings.

My father, uncle and grandmother were all arrested and sent to Nazi concentration camps for years. Although they survived -- most likely, as my dad said, because they were neither Jewish nor Russian, but Norwegian -- three of their friends and neighbors on the quiet street in our suburb of Oslo, were not so lucky. They were Jews. In October, 1942, Jacob and Rakel Feldmann and their 24-year old son Herman, my father's friend, were forced by the Nazis to leave their modest two-story wooden house and the yard with apple trees and flower beds, which they had bought 15 years earlier. And they were all three subsequently murdered.

But their memories live on in front of their house. Recently the Feldmans were each honored with a unique memorial. Through the work of German artist Gunter Demnig, these simple cobblestone memorials to some of the Jews who were massacred can be found in a number of European cities.

Demnig first began his "stumble stones" project about 20 years ago. Today there are more than 36,000 of these brass covered cobblestones which you may accidentally come upon while walking in a European city. They form a chilling but much needed reminder of what happened to the Jewish people some 70 years ago.

In Oslo there are currently 65 "stumble stones" paved into the street directly in front of a house from which inhabitants were taken to their...

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