Defiled Holocaust fresco find new home in the Shoah Museum in Rome
The contemporary pop artist Alexsandro Palombo, who was preserved in the apparent anti-Semitism of the Shoah Museum in Rome, acquired a work.
The mural depicts Liliana Segre and Sami Modiano, the last two Italian survivors of Auschwitz concentration camps, were defiled many times and even destroyed. erased.
Segre and Modiano are shown on striped clothes with vests with green bullets, with yellow satellites on them, and even serial numbers for tattoos on Nazis. The perpetrators destroyed Segre and Modiano's faces, as well as the stars on their chests, but the numbers on their arms were not touched.
“They took my face, my identity, wiped the yellow stars, but left the tattoo numbers on my arms,” Seger said.

Alexandro Palombo (Alexsandro Palombo)

Alexsandro Palombo's murals depict Holocaust survivors Liliana Segre and Sami Modiano, later (Alexsandro Palombo)
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Palumbo eventually replicated the work, and it is now part of the museum's permanent collection.
“Art is the highest expression of freedom and repeatedly attacks a work that depicts two survivors of Auschwitz concentration camps, emphasizing the value of democracy and all our freedoms,” Palorenbo said in a statement. How to be in danger. “The courage and posture of resistance of the Jewish community in Rome and Italy is a great and valuable lesson for all of us, their anti-Semitic violence against these new social and cultural terrorism and Hate responded to Risorgimento's powerful actions.”
Palombo made several works commemorating the Holocaust, and his other works were not free from wreckage.
A work titled “Arbeit Macht Frei” shows that Hungarian writer and Holocaust survivor Edith Bruck, also wrapped in an Israeli flag, was also tainted, with most of the flags being deleted. The title of this mural is the same as the Nazi phrase on the gates of Auschwitz concentration camp, which translates to “work to make you free.”
Brooke told Italian newspaper La Stampa that she felt sad but was not surprised by the vandalism, saying “anti-Semitism is a tsunami”.
Brooke's murals were also acquired by the Shoah Museum in Rome.

Alexsandro Palombo's Hungarian writer mural and Holocaust survivor Edith Bruck (Alexsandro Palombo)
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Another work by Palombo was destroyed, titled “Halt! Stoj!”, which depicts Segre, Modiano and Burk next to Pope Francis, which is equipped with a cross and a logo “a ubiquitous signature” ”. These four are described as Simpsons characters, a common theme for Palombo. Although the image of the pope was not destroyed, the destroyers defiled David's star as three Holocaust survivors.

Alexandro Palombo's three Holocaust survivors and the mural of Pope Francis was destroyed. (Alexsandro Palombo)
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Contemporary pop artist and activist Palombo uses pop culture references in his works, including celebrities and cartoon characters from the Simpsons and Disney. One of his most iconic works is “The Simpsons' Deportation to Auschwitz Concentration Camp”, which shows Margo, Homer, Maggie, Bart and Lisa before and after the concentration camp, referring to the from The liberated Holocaust survivor in the Nazi camp.