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Agramonte Cemetery

Cemeteries in PortugalReligious buildings and structures in PortoTourist attractions in Porto
Jazigo do Conde da Trindade
Jazigo do Conde da Trindade

The Agramonte Cemetery is a cemetery in the city of Porto, in Portugal which dates back to 1855.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Agramonte Cemetery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Agramonte Cemetery
Via Panorâmica, Porto

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Wikipedia: Agramonte CemeteryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.150555555556 ° E -8.6323333333333 °
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Address

Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto (FLUP)

Via Panorâmica
4150-564 Porto (Lordelo do Ouro e Massarelos)
Portugal
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Jazigo do Conde da Trindade
Jazigo do Conde da Trindade
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Holocaust Museum of Oporto

The Holocaust Museum of Oporto was created in 2021 by the Jewish Community of Oporto (CIP/CJP) in partnership with B’nai B’rith International and Holocaust museums in Moscow, Hong Kong, the United States and Europe. The Museum focuses on the general public, particularly on the young, and invests in teaching, in career training for educators, promoting exhibitions and supporting research.The main themes treated at the new Museum are Jewish life before the Holocaust, Nazism, Nazi expansion in Europe, the ghettoes, refugees, concentration, labour and extermination camps, the Final Solution, the death marches, liberation, the postwar Jewish population, the foundation of the State of Israel, win or starve, the Righteous Among the Nations.Visitors to the Museum will see a reproduction of the dorms of Auschwitz, a names room, a flame memorial, cinema, conference room, study centre, corridors with the complete narrative and, in the image of the Holocaust Washington Museum, photographs and screens showing films about the before, during and after the tragedy. The Museum is a partner of the government project “Nunca Esquecer - Programa Nacional em torno da Memória do Holocausto” (Never Forget Project – National Programme for Remembrance of the Holocaust), and aims to honour the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, of which Portugal is a member and share with society at large the documents and belongings left behind by the refugees in Oporto Synagogue during the Second World War.TimeOut classified the Holocaust Museum as the best museum in the city of Oporto and in the first month it received around 10,000 visitors.The Museum is run by members of the Jewish community of Oporto whose parents, grandparents and other relatives lost their lives in the Holocaust. Luísa Finkelstein recalls the members of her family “who were shot by firing squads after being forced to dig a mass grave". Deborah Walfrid relates that her grandparents “were executed in Poland, after their heads were shaved, numbers were tattooed on their arms and they were used as slave labour”. Eta Rabinowicz Pressman recounts how two generations of her family imprisoned in Eastern Europe died: “In one case, the porter of the building wanted to save the children but they refused and said they wanted to go with their parents. They also died. The only surviving brother was imprisoned by the Soviets in a gulag in Siberia.” Other members of the Jewish community here in Oporto have stories to tell about relatives who managed to escape from Treblinka or were forced to play the violin in Theresienstadt propaganda camp and even about German patriots who were accused of being unwanted aliens and assassinated.The Museum also has a testimony from a victim of Auschwitz’s “Angel of Death” - Chaja Lassmann – who is the mother of one of the members of the Jewish Community of Oporto who run the city’s Holocaust Museum. Chaja says she is amazed that she could have children after the repeated experiences to which she was submitted.In an article published in the United States of America on the importance of the Holocaust Museum of Oporto, the Portuguese writer and journalist Miriam Assor wrote that "as a daughter of the rabbi who led the Jewish community of Lisbon for 50 years, born in a country where Jews were expelled five centuries ago—and living in a Europe where more and more people hate Jews, Judaism and Israel—I am infused with a sense of security from the museum. It is a reminder that the phrase “Never again”—about the savage murder of 6 million Jews in a genocide designed down to the last millimetre —cannot and must not be reduced to an epigraph."According to the official site of the Jewish Community of Oporto, the Holocaust Museum is included in a strategy to fight anti-Semitism, comprised already by the Jewish Museum of Oporto, school visits to the synagogue, courses for teachers, historical films and charity missions in partnership with Oporto Diocese. The Holocaust Museum of Oporto has signed a cooperation protocol with Oporto's Jewish Museum to combat antisemitism in Europe. "These museums in Oporto should serve as a beacon of light to the rest of Europe, a land darkened today by resurgent antisemitism," President of B'nai B'rith International Charles Kaufman saidIn the meantime, Jonathan Greenblatt, the National Director of ADL, proudly announced that "The new Jewish museum will add to the respect and admiration many have for the Jewish people and the Holocaust museum will impart the lessons that all must heed: Don’t be silent in the face of evil. The more people know about the Jewish people, the less susceptible they are to hateful conspiracy theories and malign stereotypes."On May 20, 2021, the Mayor of Oporto spoke publicly with members of the local Jewish community about the great importance of the Holocaust Museum for the city.The Holocaust Museum of Oporto is donating its guestbooks to Israel’s Yad Vashem via the Israeli embassy in Portugal, according to a museum representative and, in a ceremony at the Museum in November 2021, the International Observatory of Human Rights honored all victims of the Holocaust in the presence of two hundred students.