Cemetery at the Maschsee North Shore Memorial Cemetery
The cemetery is the final resting place of concentration camp inmates, forced laborers, and prisoners of war from all over Europe. The memorial honors 153 men and one woman from the Soviet Union and other countries who were murdered by Gestapo agents in Hannover on April 6, 1945.
The memorial was designed by the sculptor Mykola Muchin-Koloda and opened to the public on October 16, 1945.
Since its founding in 2010, the Municipal Remembrance Culture Office of the State Capital of Hanover has been responsible for the scholarly management of the memorial at the Cemetery of Honor. In recent years, new forms of remembrance have been developed here. The Cemetery of Honor is increasingly recognized as a site of European remembrance. Numerous stakeholders are committed to remembrance at the Maschsee North Shore Cemetery of Honor: Since the 1980s, IG Metall has also supported remembrance efforts. Members of the IG Metall Youth enrich the commemorative events on Anti-War Day with their reflections and contributions. St. Ursula School and Bertha von Suttner School have taken on sponsorships for the memorial site. Through regular maintenance work, the students are committed to preserving the memorial cemetery and engage with the history and remembrance of World War II. Thanks to this commitment, numerous projects have been realized in recent years: In 2008 and 2010, two historical and commemorative plaques were erected to provide on-site information about the history of the memorial cemetery.
Since 2011, the State Capital’s Municipal Remembrance Culture Department, in collaboration with the Maschsee Working Group, has been organizing International Youth Encounters, which take place every two years in early May. For example, in May 2015: “From the Past into the Future – Youth Moves Europe.” Students from Russia, Poland, France, Latvia, and Greece joined young people from Hannover to reflect on the history of the Cemetery of Honor and on forms of a shared European culture of remembrance. They presented their findings at the commemorative events marking Liberation Day on May 8.
Grotto in the New City Hall
On May 8, 2012, the memorial book for the Cemetery of Honor was presented to the public. On behalf of the City’s Office of Remembrance, an extensive name search identified over 160 of the 386 people buried at the Cemetery of Honor. These names were included in the book according to the principle “One page, one name, one fate,” and the book is on permanent display in the grotto in the New City Hall. The grotto serves as a space for remembrance and reflection, as well as a place of information through an exhibition.
After decades of being pushed aside, these names have found their place: at the heart of urban life.
Maschsee North Shore Memorial Cemetery
Information on the history of the Maschsee North Shore Memorial Cemetery