Netanya the last stop for Holocaust train car
Negotiations between the Israeli and German parties were described by the Netanya municipality press statement as “tough” but in the end successful with an agreement signed about six months ago. The train car was transported from the Port of Ashdod accompanied by a delegation of dozens of motorcyclists from the Israel Motorcycle Club, the Israel Police and the Netanya municipality.
It has been placed at Netanya’s central memorial site, next to Beit Yad Lebanim – the Memorial to Fallen IDF soldiers from Netanya, the National Memorial for Fallen Ordinance Corps, the Alexandroni Brigade Memorial, the Victory of the Red Army Over Nazi Germany Memorial — which was inaugurated in June of 2012 by Russian President Vladimir Putin — and the Memorial to Victims of Acts of Terror. At the dedication ceremony last Thursday, Feirberg-Ikar said, “The memorial sites established in Netanya are a moral dictate, and they pay homage to the millions who lost their lives in the Holocaust”
According to the Municipality’s press statement, positioning the car at the end of the “commemoration path” underscores the connection beween the Holocaust — the decimation of the Jewish communities of Europe — and rebirth through the establshment of the State of Israel. The car will serve as a living monument and educational center dedicated to the Holocaust that will also display documentation about Netanya residents who survived the Holocaust.
School children will visit the site as will all delegations of Israeli high school students visiting the concentration camps in Poland; continuing education workshops will be held there; and permanent and temporary exhibitions will be displayed. Extensive information about the car, the processes of transporting the “Jewish shipments” to the crematoria, the modern technologies used by the Germans to implement their “final solution,” testimonies by the car, statements made by survivors and more will all be on display as well.
The train car memorial and educational center is due to be inaugurated in March.
Rachel Neiman