A Jewish human rights group stands for canceling a rock concert at
the site of a World War II Nazi death camp.
The British band Kosheen is scheduled to hold
the concert Saturday at the site of the Sajmiste camp near the
center of Belgrade where 48,000 Jews, Serbs and Gypsies perished
in the 1940s.
In a statement, Efraim Zuroff, the Simon Wiesenthal Center's chief Nazi hunter,
called the planned concert "a heartless insult to the memory of the victims of the Nazis."
Zuroff noted that Serbian President Boris Tadic
had recently expressed a desire to turn the grounds into a museum
dedicated to the Holocaust, a proposal the center "warmly supported."
"The rock concert scheduled for tomorrow
clearly shows how necessary the memorial project conceived by President
Tadic truly is," Zuroff said.
"We want to remind the authorities
in Belgrade that until the museum is completed, the honor and dignity
of the victims of Sajmiste must be preserved and rock concerts
on the site are not appropriate."
For Serbia's dwindling Jewish community, the concert
is the latest indignity to befall the site, which they say needs
to be saved from decades of neglect.
Nearly all of Belgrade's 8,000 Jews were killed
at Sajmiste soon after it was set up in 1941 at the site of the
Belgrade Fair exhibition ground. Thousands of leftists and Serb
nationalists also were killed at the camp.
Most of the inmates were murdered while being
transported in "gassing trucks" - vans with their exhaust pipes attached to the sealed cabin - to mass graves
on the outskirts of Belgrade.
pravda.ru
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