23rd February 2016
I love travelling and I love cities which are located at the Baltic Sea. One of these cities is Gdansk -which is very old city and what is more "cradle of freedom" Last summer walking in the street I noticed very interesting monument which commemorated Jews children.
Several months before the outbreak of the World War II, when the situation in Europe was no longer giving any hope for peace, the evacuation of Jewish children from the Nazi-dominated areas or areas which were at risk from Nazi aggression commenced. The purpose of the operation was to save the young generation from the forthcoming war. It consisted of separating Jewish children and teenagers (about 10 000 altogether) from their families and placing them in Great Britain with the intention of subsequently settling them in the Jewish Promised Land – Palestine. This traumatic experience (many children never saw their relatives again) was for most of the evacuees the only way to be saved from the felonious plans of the Nazis and the upsurge of anti-Semitism. The evacuation was carried out in the territories of Germany, Austria, which was a part of The Third Reich, Czechoslovakia, which was under Nazi occupation, and Poland together with the Free City of Gdansk.
In 2006 the transparent reproduction of “The Last Judgement” by Hans Memling, a Flemish painter, was placed in the large, semicircular window of the main hall of the Main Railway Station overlooking Podwale Grodzkie.
( wikipedia)
The sculptures and a nice memorial and tribute to those who suffered so badly.
ReplyDeleteAmndrew I think it doesn't happen again
DeleteI think I have seen this before on your blog????
ReplyDeleteColin
I must check it
DeleteThanks for showing the moving statue of the Kindertransport. Those kids were lucky; they survived.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely yes
DeleteVery interesting history. They were lucky.
ReplyDeleteI am sure they avoided death
Deletea nice sculpture.
ReplyDeleteIt looks fantastic
DeleteThe sculptures are good..
ReplyDeleteMy opinion is the same
DeleteThanks for the post. It's good that the people remembers what had happened be reminded of that when they see the sculptures. Otherwise some would say..out of sight ..out of mind.
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome
ReplyDelete