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In Latvia on Monday, Dec. From there, in the freezing cold, they were marched to a nearby beach called Skede, forced to strip to their underclothes, taken to the edge of a trench and shot dead in groups of Many of the victims were photographed in their final moments by a Nazi photographer. Holocaust survivor and Women of the Shoah Board of Directors member Shelly Weiner at the monument dedicated in her parents names.
The Monument is a community placemaking experience in Greensboro, N. Honoring those who perished, the Monument conveys a powerful statement against the murder of women and children, antisemitism, genocide and all hate. The Monument is art that requires social engagement and the participation of its audience: the act of looking through the camera, where the spectator becomes a witness, to see and feel the opposite of what the Nazi photographer was documenting. We will put our boots on….
We will resist …. We will be the witness …. Arm in arm… We will build a more just society for all communities. We see the strength and the humility of generations of Jewish women from Liepaja, moments before they were murdered by Nazis in They stand in their innocence; their only crime was that they were Jews. The photo I used as inspiration for the monument was taken by a Nazi photographer to document the victories of the Nazi regime as propaganda for its German citizens.
My hope is that each time one views the monument from that perspective, one becomes witness to exactly the opposite of what the Nazi photographer intended to document. Standing arm-in-arm are five women in their last act, looking straight at us today, with grace, humanity and defiance. The older woman, asked to strip, stands in the center with her boots on as she clutches onto the arms of generations of women in her family. The two figures on the end of the grouping bring us physically into the sculpture, revealing an emotional narrative of their impending death.