Origin of the name
The name of the project invokes multiple allusions. In Nazi Germany, an"Here lived..."
First ''Stolperstein''
A growing memorial
Locations
are always installed in front of the last home which the victim had chosen freely. The most important source for potential locations is the so-called ('Jews register'), which was set up at the 1939 census of Germany as of 17 May 1939. In cases where the actual houses were destroyed during World War II or during later restructuring of the cities, some have been installed at the former site of the house. By the end of 2016, Gunter Demnig and his co-workers had installed about 60,000 stones in more than 1,200 towns and cities throughout Europe: * Germany (since 1992) * Austria (since 1997) * The Netherlands and Hungary (since 2007) * Poland and Czech Republic (since 2008) * Belgium and Ukraine (since 2009) * Italy (since 2010) * Norway (since 2011) * Slovakia and Slovenia (since 2012) * France, Croatia, Luxemburg, Russia andNetherlands
Since 2007, Demnig has frequently been invited to place in the Netherlands. The first city to do so was Borne. As of 2016, 82 have been installed there. By January 2016, in total, more than 2,750 have been laid in 110 Dutch cities and townships, including Amsterdam, The Hague and Rotterdam, but particularly in smaller cities likeCzech Republic
In the Czech Republic, the work on started on 8 October 2008 in Prague and was initiated by theItaly
France
In France where 75,000 Jews were deported to the concentration camps, initial efforts to install were rejected. Notably, after a year-long campaign in 2011 led by a schoolgirl in the coastal town of La Baule-Escoublac (where 32 Jewish residents, including eight children, were deported), the Mayor refused to allow a request for to be installed, claiming that to do so might infringe the French constitutional principles of secularism ("laïcité") and freedom of opinion ("liberté d'opinion") and that they would therefore need to consult the Conseil d'État, France's constitutional court. In fact, contain no reference to the religion of the victim who is commemorated, and 'freedom of opinion/expression' has never been invoked in either French or European jurisprudence to justify the refusal to commemorate individual victims of war crimes. The Mayor of La Baule has consistently refused to elaborate on his reasoning, and there is no record of the Municipal Council of La Baule having sought a declaration from the Conseil d'Etat in respect of these objections. The first were installed in France in 2015 in L'Aiguillon-sur-Mer in the Vendée.Other countries
''Stolperschwellen'': "From here..."
Public discussion
Opposition
The city of Villingen-Schwenningen heatedly debated the idea of allowing in 2004, but voted against them. There is a memorial at the railway station and there are plans for a second memorial. Unlike many other German cities, the city council of Munich in 2004 rejected the installation of on public property, following objections raised by Munich's Jewish community (and particularly its chairwoman, Charlotte Knobloch, then also President of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, and herself a former victim of Nazi persecution). She objected to the idea that the names of murdered Jews be inserted in the pavement, where people might accidentally step on them. The vice president of the Central Council, Salomon Korn, however, warmly welcomed the idea at the same time. Christian Ude, then mayor of Munich, warned against an "inflation of monuments". Demnig also took part in the discussion, stating that "he intends to create a memorial at the very place where the deportation started: at the homes where people had lived last". The rejection was reconsidered and upheld in 2015; other ways of commemoration, like plaques on the walls of individual houses, and a central memorial displaying the names of the people deported from Munich, will be set up. The city's rejection of participation in the project only affects public property, however. As of 2020 around a hundred have been installed on private property. In other cities, permission for the project was preceded by long and sometimes emotional discussions. In Krefeld, the vice-chairman of the Jewish community, Michael Gilad, said that Demnig's memorials reminded him of how the Nazis had used Jewish gravestones as slabs for sidewalks. A compromise was reached that a could be installed if a prospective site was approved by both the house's owner and (if applicable) the victim's relatives. The city ofSupport
The majority of German cities welcome the installation of ''Stolpersteine''. In Frankfurt am Main, which had a long tradition of Jewish life before the Holocaust, the 1000th stolperstein was set in May 2015, and newspapers publish progress reports and invitations for citizens to sponsor further memorial stones. In Frankfurt, the victim's descendants are not allowed to sponsor ; these have to be paid for by the current inhabitants of the house, ensuring that they will respect the monument.Reactions of passers-by
People's attention is drawn towards the by reports in newspapers and their personal experience. Their thoughts are directed towards the victims. Cambridge historian Joseph Pearson argues that "It is not what is writtenDevelopment of a commemorative tradition
Documentary film
A documentary, , was made by Dörte Franke in 2008.Gallery
''Stolpersteine'' in different countries
* Austria: Stolpersteine in the district of Braunau am Inn * Belgium:See also
* List of places with ''stolpersteine'' * Shoes on the Danube Bank * Culture of Remembrance * ('Coming to terms with the past') *References
Sources
* Kurt Walter & AG Spurensuche, ''Stolpersteine in Duisburg'', Evangelischer Kirchenkreis Duisburg/ Evangelisches Familienbildungswerk, Duisburg (2005) * Beate Meyer (editor), ''Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der Hamburger Juden 1933–1945. Geschichte, Zeugnis, Erinnerung'', Landeszentrale für Politische Bildung, Hamburg (2006) * Kirsten Serup-Bilfeldt, ''Stolpersteine. Vergessene Namen, verwehte Spuren. Wegweiser zu Kölner Schicksalen in der NS-Zeit'', Kiepenheuer & Witsch (2003) * Oswald Burger and Hansjörg Straub, ''Die Levingers. Eine Familie in Überlingen'', Eggingen (2002)External links