German art activists apologise for upsetting Holocaust survivors with monument containing human remains

Arts

The monument created by the Centre for Political Beauty is said to contain the remains of Jewish victims of the Holocaust © 2019 Getty Images

A German art collective known for provocative stunts has apologised for a monument it erected this week in Berlin that caused offence to Holocaust survivors and said it will remove from public view a part of the column that it says contains the remains of people murdered by the Nazis.

Zentrum für Politische Schönheit, or Centre for Political Beauty in English, installed a 2.5-metre high steel monument at what it describes as “the place where democracy was eradicated” near the Reichstag in Berlin in 1933. The group said it had taken soil samples from locations near Nazi death camps and that the column contained human remains discovered in the soil.

The action was intended to target members of Chancellor Angela Merkels conservative political alliance who have raised the prospect of governing with the support of Alternative for Germany, a far-right, anti-immigration party. Instead, it drew widespread condemnation from Holocaust survivors representatives and Jewish groups. The International Auschwitz Committee called the gesture “disrespectful” and said survivors were dismayed at the disturbance to “the eternal rest of their murdered relatives.”

In a statement, Centre for Political Beauty said “nothing was further from our minds than woRead More – Source