Forest of the Martyrs


Forest of the Martyrs is a forest on the outskirts of West Jerusalem, Israel. It is on the western edge of the Jerusalem Forest near Beit Meir. It was planted as a memorial to those who died in the Holocaust and contains six million trees, symbolizing the six million Jews who perished at the hands of the Nazis and their collaborators in World War II. In various parts of the forest, memorial stones and marble plaques bear the names of Jewish communities that were destroyed. Additional monuments commemorate the Righteous Among the Nations as well as the donors who contributed to the establishment of the project.
Annual memorial ceremonies are held at the site on Holocaust Remembrance Day.

Special sites

Forest of the Martyrs includes three main memorial sites :Scroll of Fire Monument – an 8-metre-high bronze sculpture shaped like a double Torah scroll, one depicting scenes of destruction of the Jewish people in ancient and modern times, and the second depicting scenes of national rebirth. Located on a hilltop, designed in the form of two cylinders, “Holocaust” and “Revival.” It serves as a memorial to Holocaust victims. The sculpture, created by Nathan Rapoport, was inaugurated in 1972.

History

Prior to the planting of the forest, the site was the location of the Palestinian villages of Dayr ‘Amr, Khirbat al-‘Umur, Kasla, Bayt Umm al-Mays, and ‘Aqqur. These villages were depopulated and destroyed by Zionist forces as part of the Nakba during the 1948 Palestine war. The JNF planted forests over most of the depopulated Palestinian villages on its sites in order to conceal their remains.
The idea of planting the "Forest of the Martyrs" was conceived after the war, and already in the second half of the 1940s, fundraising for the project had begun. The planting of the forest started with a ceremony on March 7, 1951, and continued throughout the 1950s. The World B'nai Brith Jewish service organization financed a significant portion of the planting of the trees by the Jewish National Fund. Taking part in the plantings were members of immigrant associations from each country, representatives of Jewish communities from different nations, and hundreds of Jewish community organizations.
Within the forest, plots were designated for Jewish communities from different countries.
In addition to these, special forests were planted: the Ghetto Fighters’ Forest, initiated by the Youth Council for the Jewish National Fund, and the Children’s Memorial Forest, initiated by the Teachers’ Council for the Jewish National Fund, which was funded in part by donations from the children of the country and planted by them.