Cobblestones commemorating Holocaust turn a new corner
By tying a victim's fate to a capsule biography, the 'stumble stones' seek to reduce the epic scale of the Holocaust to a more comprehensible human story.
Demnig, from Cologne, sets the stones outside homes of victims of Nazi persecution. They aim to remind passers-by of the Nazis' systematic persecution of ethnic and other minorities, mainly Jews, but also homosexuals, the disabled, political dissidents and Roma.
"An evangelical pastor in Cologne said to me 'Gunter, you'll never manage (to honor) the millions. But one can start small'. And 75,000 as a symbol is already something," Demnig told Reuters after a trip to set more plaques in Italy.
By tying a victim's fate to a capsule biography, the 'stumble stones' seek to reduce the epic scale of the Holocaust to a more comprehensible human story.