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Memorial Opens at Death Camp
in Poland
Thursday June 3, 2004
By VANESSA GERA
Associated Press Writer
BELZEC, Poland (AP) -
A rabbi's prayer and warnings against the evils of racism
inaugurated a new memorial Thursday to victims of the
Belzec death camp, where 500,000 Jews and other Nazi
targets were exterminated during just seven months of
World War II.
The memorial, sponsored by the
American Jewish Committee and the Polish government,
is meant to give dignity and greater prominence to the
memory of Belzec's victims after the site was neglected
for decades under communism.
"This memorial will help
to ensure that the world will never forget the horrors
of fascism and racism,'' said a message fromst-communist
governments' growing effort to acknowledge that much
of the Holocaust took place on German-occupied Polish
soil.
Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski
hailed the project as ``an important step in the process
of Polish-Jewish reconciliation.''
Belzec was one of six death camps
set up in occupied Poland as part of the Nazi "final
solution'' to exterminate Europe's Jews. It was the
first one to use gas chambers, which operated in March-December
1942.
After closing the camp, the Nazis
dug up bodies, burned and crushed them, then reburied
the remains in 33 mass graves to try to hide their crimes.
They planted trees and built a house over the graves.
Commemoration of Belzec's victims
was difficult because virtually no one survived the
camp and its victims were not registered. Belzec victims
were brought in by train and sent straight to the gas
chambers.
Rabbi Andrew Baker of the American
Jewish Committee said he knew of only two survivors.
"There is no firsthand testimony
from victims,'' said Baker, the project leader.
In communist times until 1989,
a monument commemorated ``victims of fascism'' in general,
reflecting an official line that Jews believed did not
reflect their suffering.
Even after communism fell, the
site was littered with garbage and local people took
shortcuts across it.
Ash and shards of bone were continuously
brought to the surface by wind and rain - a desecration
because Jewish religious law says remains must not be
moved or disturbed.
The new memorial includes a display
on the death camp's history and a polished concrete
wall inscribed with the first names of some victims.
Kwasniewski mourned the annihilation
of Jews from Galicia - an area of prewar Poland that
is now part of Ukraine - and said the memorial served
as a warning at a time of resurgent anti-Semitism in
Europe.
"I trust that as of today,
the memory of what happened here will not be only Jewish
or Polish alone,'' Kwasniewski said. "We should
spare no effort to make it part of the collective memory
of the whole of Europe, and the world at large.''
Miles Lerman, who chaired the
council overseeing the Holocaust Museum in Washington,
launched the project more than 10 years ago. He lost
his mother, sister and other family members at Belzec.
"Throughout the years, Belzec
fell into oblivion and terrible disarray, with the mass
graves littered with beer bottles and other garbage,''
he said.
"It was heartbreaking to
see it in this condition. And we resolved not to rest
until we get this place restored to the decency the
victims deserve.''
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