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hamburgdammtor07

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The 90th Anniversary...
I attend many memorial events as a participant-observer....
mhatlie - Mon Nov 17, 10:53
I agree it is not a surprise...
There was _some_ attention paid to WW1 in the press,...
mhatlie - Sun Nov 16, 15:27
no time for remembering
I have to say, I don’t find the lack of interest...
Michael Prince (anonymous) - Sun Nov 16, 09:46
New marker for deserters...
Last July, the Tübingen city council voted to...
mhatlie - Fri Nov 14, 12:22
Dial-a-Memory
Munich, the one-time „capitol of the movement“...
KMPRINCE - Mon Oct 6, 09:51
mhatlie - Thu Apr 17, 09:35

Belonging and battlegrounds...

I have never heard of one of these lasting for forty years. I would wager that soon, if not already, some of the mourners' parents were not even born when the event occurred. I think you are right in that mourning and participation in the "cult" are clearly markers of belonging to the "club," and, for many, not really expressions of "mourning" in any narrow sense.

I am mostly familiar with ephemeral memorials in the context of large, public tragedies such as the death of Diana, school shootings or public murders: sidewalks become covered with flowers and photos and notes for a few weeks, and then fade away. There are also ephemeral additions to permanent memorials, not just candles and flowers, of course, but notes, artwork and even toys.

I recall how some of these sites become battlegrounds. In the United States a number of years ago, atheist groups were removing improvised crosses along roadsides which marked the sites of fatal accidents. Those who placed them were building memorials to dead loved ones. The atheists were fighting a separation of church and state battle, however. They objected to "religious symbols" being displayed on public land. The law was on the side of the atheists - it is illegal to place unauthorized signs and markers on highways. Here in Germany, these crosses tend to be left unmolested.

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Sites of Memory

Welcome

This blog grew out of the sites-of-memory.de project. It features impressions and analysis of past and present memorial culture.

If you would like to be an author for this blog, see our call for contributors.

The blog logo is a photo of a statue at the soldiers' "Brethren Cemetery" in Riga, Latvia.

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M. Hatlie
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Cell: +49-163-1341718
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Last update: Tue Nov 18, 22:11

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Armenian Genocide
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