The Fort Worth Press - Czechs start razing pig farm built over WWII Roma camp

USD -
AED 3.673042
AFN 68.266085
ALL 93.025461
AMD 389.644872
ANG 1.80769
AOA 912.000367
ARS 1001.795932
AUD 1.547988
AWG 1.795
AZN 1.70397
BAM 1.85463
BBD 2.025224
BDT 119.861552
BGN 1.857551
BHD 0.376464
BIF 2962.116543
BMD 1
BND 1.344649
BOB 6.930918
BRL 5.79695
BSD 1.002987
BTN 84.270352
BWP 13.71201
BYN 3.282443
BYR 19600
BZD 2.02181
CAD 1.41005
CDF 2865.000362
CHF 0.888255
CLF 0.035345
CLP 975.269072
CNY 7.232504
CNH 7.23645
COP 4499.075435
CRC 510.454696
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 104.561187
CZK 23.965904
DJF 178.606989
DKK 7.07804
DOP 60.43336
DZD 133.184771
EGP 49.296856
ERN 15
ETB 121.465364
EUR 0.94835
FJD 2.27595
FKP 0.789317
GBP 0.792801
GEL 2.73504
GGP 0.789317
GHS 16.022948
GIP 0.789317
GMD 71.000355
GNF 8643.497226
GTQ 7.746432
GYD 209.748234
HKD 7.785135
HNL 25.330236
HRK 7.133259
HTG 131.85719
HUF 387.22504
IDR 15898.3
ILS 3.744115
IMP 0.789317
INR 84.47775
IQD 1313.925371
IRR 42092.503816
ISK 137.650386
JEP 0.789317
JMD 159.290693
JOD 0.709104
JPY 154.340504
KES 129.894268
KGS 86.503799
KHR 4051.965293
KMF 466.575039
KPW 899.999621
KRW 1395.925039
KWD 0.30754
KYD 0.835902
KZT 498.449576
LAK 22039.732587
LBP 89819.638708
LKR 293.025461
LRD 184.552653
LSL 18.247689
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.898772
MAD 9.999526
MDL 18.224835
MGA 4665.497131
MKD 58.423024
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3397.999946
MOP 8.042767
MRU 40.039827
MUR 47.210378
MVR 15.450378
MWK 1739.225262
MXN 20.35475
MYR 4.470504
MZN 63.903729
NAD 18.247689
NGN 1665.820377
NIO 36.906737
NOK 11.08797
NPR 134.832867
NZD 1.704318
OMR 0.384524
PAB 1.002987
PEN 3.80769
PGK 4.033
PHP 58.731504
PKR 278.485894
PLN 4.096724
PYG 7826.086957
QAR 3.656441
RON 4.725204
RSD 110.944953
RUB 99.872647
RWF 1377.554407
SAR 3.756134
SBD 8.390419
SCR 13.840372
SDG 601.503676
SEK 10.978615
SGD 1.343704
SHP 0.789317
SLE 22.603667
SLL 20969.504736
SOS 573.230288
SRD 35.315504
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.776255
SYP 2512.529858
SZL 18.240956
THB 34.842038
TJS 10.692144
TMT 3.51
TND 3.164478
TOP 2.342104
TRY 34.447038
TTD 6.810488
TWD 32.476804
TZS 2667.962638
UAH 41.429899
UGX 3681.191029
UYU 43.042056
UZS 12838.651558
VES 45.732111
VND 25390
VUV 118.722009
WST 2.791591
XAF 622.025509
XAG 0.033067
XAU 0.00039
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.755583
XOF 622.025509
XPF 113.090892
YER 249.875037
ZAR 18.18901
ZMK 9001.203587
ZMW 27.537812
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    6.82

    +0.59%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

Czechs start razing pig farm built over WWII Roma camp
Czechs start razing pig farm built over WWII Roma camp / Photo: © AFP

Czechs start razing pig farm built over WWII Roma camp

The demolition of a sprawling pig farm, built on the site of a wartime concentration camp for the Roma minority south of Prague, got underway on Friday following decades of controversy.

Text size:

Targeted by the Nazis, some 1,300 Roma were imprisoned in the Lety camp during World War II, and 327 died there, including 241 children under 14 years of age.

More than 500 others were sent on to Nazi Germany's infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp in occupied southern Poland.

The Moscow-steered communist regime, which ruled in former Czechoslovakia after the war, built the pig farm on the site in the 1970s.

The regime was toppled in 1989, four years before Czechoslovakia split into two states.

But even then successive Czech governments took decades to finally allow the demolition as the largely impoverished Roma minority stayed on the sidelines of society.

"Today marks the beginning of the end of one of the most shameful chapters in our modern history," parliament speaker Marketa Pekarova Adamova said at a ceremony in Lety.

Together with other officials, she symbolically started the demolition by dismantling a model made of little concrete bricks.

Cenek Ruzicka, whose mother was a Lety survivor, was less restrained as he grabbed a pickaxe and started smashing one of the buildings of the farm that was once home to 13,000 pigs.

His brother had a go at the windows with a hammer.

"As you can see, it has ended well. Of course I didn't expect it to take so long," Ruzicka told AFP.

- 'My culture drove me' -

Late Czech president Vaclav Havel unveiled a memorial near the farm in 1995, but officials then tiptoed about the farm which had been taken over by a private company.

A breakthrough came only in 2018 when the government agreed to buy the farm and build a Roma Holocaust memorial on the site, under pressure from the Roma minority and international institutions including the United Nations and the EU.

A visitor centre is due to be completed early next year as the first part of the memorial whose total construction cost is expected to be more than 100 million Czech koruna ($4 million).

Ruzicka, whose grandmother and three-month-old sister died at the camp, was a major driving force behind the move.

"My culture drove me. The guys from our community of the original Czech Roma are terribly proud, we never give up," said Ruzicka, who was born in 1946.

The Czech Republic, an EU country of 10.5 million people, has a Roma community estimated to number between 250,000 and 300,000.

Of the 9,500 Czech Roma registered before World War II, fewer than 600 returned home after the Holocaust.

Historians believe the Nazis exterminated over half of the roughly one million Roma who had lived in Europe prior to World War II.

The European Union estimates that 10-12 million Roma currently live in Europe, around six million of them in EU nations.

T.Mason--TFWP