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The Israel Genealogical Society is proud to
announce the documentation of the Memorials for
Vanished Communities (MVC), in preparation for
the 24th IAJGS Conference on Jewish Genealogy in
Jerusalem. The project was initiated by Mathilde
Tagger, and carried out by Rose Feldman, Chana
Furman, Ellen Stepak and others.
These memorials in Israel are located mainly
in cemeteries, in particular the one in Holon,
but they can be found in other locations as
well. Some are grouped in cemeteries, whereas
others are found in isolated locations. Many
towns appear on monuments listing several or
more communities in a region. One of the most
comprehensive and impressive of these is the
memorial in Holon for the Jewish community of
Wlodawa (and for those killed at Sobibor),
Poland, and for other Jewish communities in the
vicinity. Among the Jewish communities
documented on these monuments are villages
otherwise forgotten by history.These memorials
are a labor of love, erected to memorialize
loved ones lost in the Holocaust, pogroms or as
martyrs, for whom there can be no true
gravestone. Many monuments are beautiful, and
are the product of much thought and creativity.
Some of the memorials also list names of people
murdered from that locality. All of the
gravestones for communities that vanished in the
Holocaust have symbolic ashes brought from
killing fields and/or death camps of Eastern
Europe. Countries particularly represented in
the memorials themselves are today’s Poland,
Ukraine, Lithuania and Belarus. Some of the
memorials represent entire countries, such as
the Hungarian memorial, where many communities
are listed. Some countries, such as Belgium,
Holland, Latvia, Estonia and France, and some
communities, have forests planted in their
names, instead of or in addition to memorials.
Many landsmanshaften associations hold annual
memorial ceremonies at the monuments for their
towns, though as the communities of people who
remember these towns and their people from
before WWII dwindle, the ceremonies have become
less prevalent.
In preparation is a CD of this documentation
project, which will include photographs of the
memorials. The CD will be available at the 2004
IAJGS Conference.
The list of communities and countries may be
accessed below. They are PDF files. |