Observing Memories Issue 2 | Page 55

Hans Scharoon. The site of the greatest crime against humanity was built over with the most beautiful architecture for classical music directed by the world’s most important conductors. Should music make us forget crime? Together with Andreas Knitz, with whom I have collaborated for over twenty years, I participated in the competition for the Memorial for the Victims of National Socialist “Euthanasia” Killings with the following proposal. We didn’t want to create a new memorial for the very first victims of the Holocaust. There was already Peter Eisenman’s Field of Stelae. We wanted to take six stelae from this memorial, since the Nazis murdered sick and disabled people in gas chambers in six places. We wanted to mark the empty spaces in the Field of Stelae with the names of these places (Hadamar, Grafeneck, Brandenburg, Pirna-Sonnenstein, Hartheim and Bernburg). We intended to mark the plot of the former mansion at Tiergartenstraße 4 and raise awareness of the overlap of the plots of the T4 mansion and the Philharmonic. One of the stelae would have recalled the site of the killing of the sick in the foyer of the Philharmonic, thereby to some extent dedicating the concerts there to the 300,000 Images: Horst Hoheisel & Andreas Knitz, 2012, proposal for the Memori- al for the Victims of National Socialist “Euthanasia” Killings victims of the “euthanasia” killings. Of course though, the Holocaust Memorial is untouchable and the stunning architecture of the Philharmonic is listed as a protected monument. Although we did receive a prize of recognition from the jury, the realisation of the idea was unthinkable. Manfred Schneckenburger, who curated documenta 6 and 8, once said to me regarding my memorial ideas: “Don’t be surprised that your works are so often eliminated from competitions. You build repudiation into your own designs!” However, together with Andreas Knitz I did win overview 53