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  • A sign directing to the Berlinische Galerie , museum of modern art, photography and architecture in Kreuzberg, Berlin, Germany, April 06, 2012.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0090.jpg
  • IMG_0479.jpg
  • מוכר כדורים במחסון חיזמה<br />
צילום עומר מסינגר
    002.jpg
  • A graffiti artist holds a can of spray as he paints on the wall at Mauerpark Berlin, Germany, April 08, 2012.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0084.jpg
  • Swan PINK #3-Recovered.psd
  • The Garden RED-GREEN.jpg
  • A graffiti artist holds a can of spray as he paints on the wall at Mauerpark Berlin, Germany, April 08, 2012.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0086.jpg
  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel  wait as German and Chinese counterparts sign and exchange mutual agreement,  prior to a Joint press conference in the Chancellery in Berlin, on July 5 2017.<br />
(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    MERKEL#1.jpg
  • Great Dove.jpg
  • For site_Protester Throws Orange Fla...jpg
  • Swans RED.jpg
  • DEER.jpg
  • 159A9054.jpg
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_012.JPG
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_053.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_048.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_018.jpg
  • Swans (Cygnus) float in formation during snowfall on the Landwehr Canal, Berlin, Germany, February 05, 2021. Several warm winters allowed for the canal's flock to grow in numbers.
    20210205_Swans in The Snow_9.jpg
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_011.JPG
  • A man passes by a section of the Berlin Wall with a the painting "Vaterland" featuring the Star of David and the Israeli flag with the German flag, by the artist by Guenther Schaefer. East Side Gallery, Berlin.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0027.jpg
  • People walk along the Spree River near The Molecule Men statue, as Smoke rises from a chimney at Berlin's  Klingenberg Power Plant, February 25, 2017.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0002.jpg
  • The Molecule Men statue is seen in the water of the Spree River, in Berlin, Germany, October 30, 2021.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20211030_Berlin_021.JPG
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_078.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_068.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_060.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_055.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_051.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_041.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_034.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_033.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_031.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_027.jpg
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_016.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_015.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_014.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_013.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_010.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_008.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_007.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_004.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_003.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_001.JPG
  • A section of the Berlin Wall with a the painting "Vaterland" featuring the Star of David and the Israeli flag with the German flag, by the artist Guenther Schaefer. East Side Gallery, Berlin.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0069.jpg
  • Festival of Cultures participants are seen parading through Berlin's streets, on May 15, 2016.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0057.jpg
  • A view of colorful Helium Balloons in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, October 02, 2016.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0049.jpg
  • A man passes by a section of the Berlin Wall with a the painting "Vaterland" featuring the Star of David and the Israeli flag with the German flag, by the artist by Guenther Schaefer. East Side Gallery, Berlin.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0028.jpg
  • A man passes by a section of the Berlin Wall with a the painting "Vaterland" featuring the Star of David and the Israeli flag with the German flag, by the artist by Guenther Schaefer. East Side Gallery, Berlin.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0026.jpg
  • The painting 'Lord Help Me To Survive This Deadly Love' by Dmitri Vrubel at the touristic hot-spot location East Side Galleryin Berlin, Germany, November 20, 2016.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0024.jpg
  • The Molecule Men statue is seen in the water of the Spree River, as Smoke rises from a chimney at Berlin's Klingenberg Power Plant, February 25, 2017.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0003.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_081.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_072.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_025.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_013.jpg
  • Graffiti writing and paint on a vandalized section of the Soviet War Memorial at Treptow Park in Berlin, Germany, April 07, 2022. Several stone plaques, the base of the statue of Sergeant Nikolai Masalov and the memorial room were sprayed with anti-Russian and anti war slogans in protest of the Russian invasion to Ukraine. The memorial which commemorated the Red Army soldiers who fell during the battle of the German capital have seen acts of vandalism on several occasions in the past.(Photo by Omer Messinger)
    20220407_Memorial Vandalism_007.jpg
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_009.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_006.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_005.JPG
  • Artist Gunter Demnig lays a stumbling stone (Stolperstein) in honor of NS-victim Lenchen Metz (born Rothgießer)in front of the house at Reichenberger Str. 151 at Kreuzberg District in Berlin, Germany, August 28, 2021. The Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) project is the initiative of artist Gunter Demnig, meant to commemorate those persecuted by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945. The blocks have the names and fate of the person they commemorate engraved into a brass plate on the top of each Stolperstein, and are laid into the pavement in front of the last voluntarily places of residence of the victims of the Nazis. The specific block of Mrs. Metz was an initiative of Tal Alon and Olaf Kühnemann who live down the street from the house of which she was deported to Theresienstadt Ghetto, where she died.
    20210828_Stumblestones_002.JPG
  • Actors pose with flags and uniforms of an American soldier and a Soviet soldier at Pariser Platz square in Berlin, Germany, April 05, 2012.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0110.jpg
  • A view of the south western facade of the Pergamonmuseum on Museum Island in Berlin, Germany, April 08, 2012.
    Berlin Cityscape_Messinger0078.jpg
  • A man is resting on two chairs, out the "Tel-Aviv Museum of Art".
    0044_IMG_0816.jpg
  • Lia van Leer<br />
Pioneer in the field of art film programming and film archiving in Israel. She founded the Haifa and the Jerusalem cinematheques, the Israel Film Archive and the Jerusalem Film Festival.
    Lia Van Leer 1924-2015
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Omer Messinger

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