Model of wartime camp for Czech Roma unveiled

A model of the Nazi internment camp for Czech Roma as it looked like in 1942 was unveiled at its original site in Lety Monday. The model was made of an environment-friendly material by students of a secondary business school in Teplice, north Bohemia. It was difficult to find a period photograph of the Lety camp on the basis of which its true model could be created since none of the survivors from the camp is alive now, Cervencl said, adding that the last one died in 2012. The creation of the model was very important for the young people since they could thereby learn a lot about the WWII history and they will keep this knowledge in the future, Cervencl said. He noted that the students from the Teplice secondary school could also make similar models of Lidice and Lezaky, Czech villages obliterated by the Nazis in 1942.

Over 1300 Roma were interned in Lety during the German Nazi occupation, 327 of whom perished in the camp and over 500 were sent to the extermination camp in Oswiecim (Auschwitz) where most of them died. A memorial to the Romani Holocaust was set up at the former burial ground of the Lety concentration camp for Roma. However, it is near a pig farm situated at the site now.

Roma and human rights activists have protested against it for years demanding that the pig farm be abolished. Prime Minister Petr Necas (Civic Democrats (ODS), who resigned in min-June, said last year the government had no money for the purchase of the farm. A total of 12,000 people visited the Lety memorial in 2012.

Source: Prague Daily Monitor
Date: 09.07.2013