Albertinaplatz is an area in the center of the city, defined by the intersection of six streets. The Monument Against War and Fascism is located there, and it includes several disturbing sculptures. The day after Austria was annexed by Germany, all Jews were forced to bring brushes, even toothbrushes, to fall to their hands and knees and clean the pavement. Citizens of Vienna gathered around taunting and even kicking and hitting them. This statue depicts an elderly man covered in barbed wire. Jews had been part of Viennese society, with varying degrees of acceptance and safety, since the 13th century. By 1942, 65,000 Viennese Jews had been sent to camps. Only 2,000 of them survived the war. Today fewer than 10,000 Jews live in the city.
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