The shoes on the Danube promenade is a commemoration dedicated to the Jewish victims of the Fascist Arrow Cross Party. In March 1944, the German Wehrmacht invaded its ally, Hungary. In May 1944 mass deportations commenced. In less than 2 months some 440,000 Jews were deported. Nearly 200,000 remained incarcerated in Budapest. Between Dec. 1944 and the end of 1945, the Arrow Cross took as many as 20,000 Jewish men, women and children from the ghetto, forced them to remove their shoes, line up along the edge of the water of the Danube, and were shot. Their bodies fell or were pushed into the river and floated away. They had to take their shoes off since shoes were valuable at the time. Sixty pairs of the cast iron shoes were created by Gyula Pauer and Can Togay. Along with the shoes you can find a plaque with an inscription which reads:
To the memory of the victims shot into the Danube
by the Arrow Cross Militiamen in 1944-45.
Sad is that some of the shoes have been pried up and stolen.
When I saw these photos and read of this, it touched me deeply.
I wrote a poem, and here it is.
SHOES ON THE DANUBE
PROMENADE
They stand
as if waiting,
waiting for their wearers to
pop
out of the water after a
brisk swim.
But there will be no return,
no laughter,
No donning of shoes.
Sixty pairs made of cast iron
stand
facing the Danube
to memorialize
the twenty thousand Jewish
men, women and children shot,
discarded into the
dispassionate blue water.
My eyes settle
upon one small pair,
one shoe askew from the
other,
as if the child who wore them
tottered
away in a hurry to run
barefoot
along the sinuous waterway.
I imagine a boy, head of
curls,
with a big smile and lyrical
laughter.
To one side of these small
shoes
stands a duet of a woman’s
shoe
and I wonder if these
belonged to his mother.
On the other side is a man’s
single shoe poised
adventurously on the edge,
its mate gone.
I want to envision
the three of them,
father, mother, son,
dancing, laughing, playing
jubilantly at this riverside.
I want to imagine this
instead.
Rose Lefebvre ©
Wonderful memorials, the shoes, the plaque and your haunting poem. We must keep the losses during this terrible war and genocide before us, or it will too easily happen again to someone else, like me or you. Lynnette
ReplyDeletemost TOUCHING post i ever read dear .
ReplyDeletethank you for enhancing my knowledge
Wish I had this on paper in front of me so I could underline perfect words, and draw hearts and tearful faces. What a poignant memorial.
ReplyDeleteAn incredibly beautiful poem, Rose. Thank you for sharing this terrible, haunting, heartbreaking reminder that we must oppose such atrocities, that love and compassion must triumph over fear and hatred. Alice
ReplyDeleteSo poignant Rose and so sad. How can people be so cruel and demonic? Thanks Rose for sharing your talent!
DeleteHelen
This is such a heart-touching tribute to such a heinous event. Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. We should not forget.
ReplyDeleteIt was brave of you to write about such a dramatic moment of history and reading you brought tears to m eyes.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, Rose! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteJoseph M.
What a beautiful and touching poem, Rose. Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteThat's a sobering sight.
ReplyDeleteOh, Rose - this is so heartbreaking! Mankind's inhumanity is always so shocking to me and it still goes on......your poem is lovely and sad. Hugs xo Karen
ReplyDeleteWhat a heart-breaking sight.
ReplyDelete