Platz des Unsichtbaren Mahnmals

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File:Saarbruecken Schloss 5.jpg
The invisible memorial in front of the castle.

The Platz des Unsichtbaren Mahnmals - or in English, the Place of the Invisible Memorial - is a memorial to the Jewish cemeteries that existed until 1933 in Germany. It is located in Saarbrücken, capital of the German state of the Saarland.

To the visitor, the memorial is completely invisible - it only appears as a sign at the place, reading "Platz des Unsichtbaren Mahnmals".

In April 1990, the art professor Jochen Gerz and several of his students began, in secrecy, to dig up cobblestones from the place in front of the Saarbrücken castle. The underside of the stones where then engraved with the names of German Jewish cemeteries, and afterwards they were placed again on the place, with the inscription facing downwards. They chose the fore court of Saarbrücken Castle because a dependency of the Secret State Police, or Gestapo, was located in the castle during the time of national socialism.

In August 1991, the idea was taken up by the city council of Saarbrücken, and it decided to implement it legally. In the end - until May 1993 - 2146 location names of Jewish cemeteries were engraved into the cobblestones, and again placed back into the fore court of the castle. The memorial intends to portray the neglect of the German past.

File:Saarbruecken Schloss 3.jpg
A plaque denoting the memorial was unveiled on May 23, 1993.

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