Vandals deface new Milan ‘stumbling stone’ Holocaust memorial

The vandalism was discovered the daughter of Dante Coen, the person commemorated by the plaque, a day after it was installed as part of the city's International Holocaust Remembrance Day events.

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ROME (JTA) – Vandals defaced one of the “stumbling stone” Holocaust memorials unveiled last week in Milan, covering it with black paint.

The vandalism was discovered Saturday by Ornella Coen, the daughter of Dante Coen, the person commemorated by the plaque, who was deported to Auschwitz and then killed at Buchenwald on April 4, 1945.

“Stumbling stones,” or “stolpersteine,” are individual commemorative cobblestones placed in front of the houses of people who were deported during the Holocaust. Placing them is an ongoing memorial and art project by the German artist Gunter Deming, who installs each one — nearly 60,000 in various countries since the mid-1990s.

The defaced stone was one of the first six stumbling stones to be installed in Milan, during  a ceremony on Jan. 19. It is believed to have been defaced the next day.

“I was still so emotional because of the stone in memory of my father that when I came out in the street Saturday morning and saw it covered in black paint, I felt sick,” Ornella Coen told the newspaper La Repubblica.

The stones in Milan were placed as part of observances of International Holocaust Memorial Day, which takes place on Jan. 27.

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