War Memorial Dresden

Moritzburger Landstraße, Dresden
Sachsen, Germany

Heidefriedhof Cemetery in Dresden contains the general war memorial of Dresden. It is a round square surrounded by 14 columns. Seven columns bear the following names of cities, which suffered heavy during the Second World War: [i]Coventry Dresden Leningrad Lidice Oradour Rotterdam Warschau[/i] The other seven columns, on the other side of the square, bear names of concentration camps: [i]Auschwitz Bergen-Belsen Buchenwald Dachau Ravensbrück Sachsenhausen Theresienstadt[/i] The memorial was built during the period of Soviet occupation and had a perpetual flame which was extinguished after reunification in 1990. It bears an inion in German which means ''How many died? Who knows the number? You can see the agony on your wounds of the nameless ones who burned here in the hellfire of the human hand.'' Nearby on a piece of tarmac are sculptures of five prone figures covered with a very thin material. There is no clue on site as to their provenance but they appear to be bodies reflecting the February ''45 bombing.

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Text by: Fedor de Vries & David Rupert Sneath

Photo(s): David Sneath (1,2,3), Fedor de Vries (4,5,6,7)

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