I see him as a groom, and as a father. I imagine him in my life, and doing puzzles on the floor with my daughter. Even in death, he's so much more than a number
80 percent of Serbia’s Jews were murdered by the Nazis. But in Belgrade, the Holocaust is still largely ignored. Not a single sign, memorial or monument lists the Jews who died. I want my grandfather to be named
I Can’t Mark Where My Grandfather Is Buried, but I Want to Mark Where He Lived
For the last three and a half years, I’ve been trying to get
stolpersteine, translated from German as “stumbling stones,” in front of the last place my grandfather lived: Solunska Uliza 8 in Belgrade. Stolpersteine are small stones placed on the street outside the last voluntary residence of Holocaust victims and survivors.
Over 70,000 stones have already been placed across Europe, making them the world’s largest decentralized memorial. A stone with my grandfather’s name on it would be a small victory against genocide and hatred.