新英格兰纳粹大屠杀纪念碑
4A地址: 暂无
开放时间: 暂无
更多热门城市
景点印象
Steps from City Hall and Quincy Market is the New England Holocaust Memorial...6 glass towers each engraved with 1 million 'numbers' the Nazis engraved on each of their victims...steam rises inside each tower to replicate the gassing of the innocents. Stirring quotations from survivors and witnesses...a must see.
This is a simple Memorial of glass that will make you weep. Please take the time to walk to it, it isn't far off the Freedom trail, near the Union Oyster House. Very moving.
Next to Faneuil hall, on Union Street across from the Union Oyster house and near some of Boston's oldest bars and restaurants is the museum. This walk through museum is haunting. It's so well done, it will just fill your heart with emotion.
Walk down the sidewalk, under the glass towers with six million numbers etched into the glass. Read the quotes, read the places, read the names. It is a silencing place that humbles anyone. It is not an overstatement, it is a pragmatic and sorrowful place that is there to remind us all of mans blind indifference to his fellow man. It is good to walk through the memorial to remind us of what the world can suddenly become if we all are not vigilant. It is a powerful place to visit. If you are in Boston fit it into your visit. Walk over the simulated ashes, through the towers that represent the gas chambers, steam will envelope you, stop and look at the seemingly endless numbers etched into the glass all around you. Each number a person.
It is a very powerful memorial on a public area, it is nice to walk trough. It's nice to see some history while walking around Boston.
The memorial is a simple, poignant structure. Of unadorned glass panels intermingled with reflective quotes and etched with unending columns of numbers which will immediately send you into a deep melancholy once you realized what those endless numbers represent. Sad but a lovely, contemplative place.
We stumbled upon this while walking from little Italy one night, and it is incredible. Not to be missed
This is a very powerful exhibit for all ages. Boston should be very proud to have this in their city.So well done!
My son was showing me around and didn't tell me about this ahead of time. I'm glad he didn't because it was such a moving yet sad memorial. I'm not sure who designed it and didn't care - just that they did a great job. It was the coolest memorial outside of D.C. Don't miss this.
the memorial near quincy market makes you appreciate life and that mankind can be cruel.it is a simple memorial with a powerful message .visitors are quite in this area near the union oyster house .worth a visit .
I have been to Auschwitz in Poland. The memorial captured the feelings I had then and is architecturally interesting.
This short walk through several glass-enclosed panels depicting different concentration camps captures your concentration. Each panel has steam rising up around you. There is a memorial as well.
Everything about the holocaust is a sobering experience that we should never forget what evil can be done by individuals.
I live in Boston and walk through this when I am walking to Haymarket or the North End. It never fails to move me and reminds me of the terrible things that mankind does to mankind.
Representing those perished in concentrating camps on polish territory. Too bad doesn't include other nationalities besides Jews but looks like anyone else try to go forward with the time. Very touching inscription on the marble next to glass memorial.