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The most important project that the International Youth Meeting Centre conducts is “If Stones could Speak”. Young people who have visual impairment and who are blind carve sandstone and recreate their experience of visiting Auschwitz. Every work is accompanied by a short description of emotions and sentiments written down by the authors. “These works are, from an artistic point of view, very impressive. They had no artistic background, no artistic education, but the record in the stone, like golden thoughts, were really striking with the profoundness of their philosophical meaning. […] We all know that young people with various intellectual impairments or sensual impairments have some profound way of experiencing the reality, but they formulated their sensations in a great way.” During the opening of the exhibition, “the Campus Christophorus Jugendwerk visited us with skinheads, extreme right-wing young people. […] I remember a young guy who came up to me and he said: “You are the director, you opened this. I have never thought that such a blind person can make such a great sculpture.” In this simple language, which would not be politically correct today, they expressed a lot. It was the best possible compliment for this project.” This project made young people proud of what they can achieve and really impressed their co-ordinators. Mr. Szuster concluded the presentation of this project by saying that, “There is no reason why people with various kinds of disabilities and various degrees of disabilities and dysfunctions should be excluded from the process of historical education, because this would be another stage of their exclusion. Institutions that deal with human rights should fight against exclusion and this completes its mission.”