Erosion of memory: Time and nature



1. i 2. Photo by M. Kacperczyk, 27.03.2014. Catholic cemetery, Samotna Street
3. Photo by M. Kacperczyk, 01.04.2014, Catholic cemetery, Cytadela
4. Photo by J. Ostrouch, 16.03.2014. After the name of the Park was changed from Park of Victory to Manitius Park, the relief with the old name of the park is overgrown with bushes. On the ground of liquidated evangelical cemetery.

Erasing memory: vandalism



1. Photo by Z. Pińczewska, 27.03.2014,Catholic Cemetery, Samotna Street.

Reconstructing memory



1. Photo by Z. Pińczewska, 27.03.2014. Catholic cemetery, Samotna Street. A candle left by the supporters of the Lech Poznań football club after cleaning up parts of the cemetery.
2. Photo by M. Fabiszak, 04.05.2014. The historical reenactment group of the 7th Division of Horse Artillery commemorates the fallen soldiers by adding plaques about them on their graves with red and black ribbons.
3. Photo by M. Fabiszak, 14.01.2012. The urban location game “Following the traces of the Poznan Jews” started at the reconstructed graves of Akiva Eger and his family in the backyard of a tenement building in Głogowska Street.
4. Photo by J. Ostrouch, 16.03.2014. The commemoration of Protestant church Minister Manitius in the Park of his name, formerly an evangelical cemetery converted into Victory Park (1952 [?1948] – 2000).
5. Photo by M. Fabiszak, 04.05.2014, A memorial designed by Ryszard Skupin, first dedicated “to the Polish Workers’ Party activists murdered in World War 2 by the Germans”, after transformation renamed as the “Memorial of the victims of 1939-1956”.
6. Photo by M. Fabiszak, 27.08.2011. The memorial of the victims of the Forced Labour Camp for the Jews in Poznań, Królowej Jadwigi Street