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CDS sculpture represents lives lost during the Holocaust
Apr 20, 2012 | 1078 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<i>Adam Barsouk, Community Day School student council president, lights a candle. (Chronicle photos by Lindsay Dill)</i>
Adam Barsouk, Community Day School student council president, lights a candle. (Chronicle photos by Lindsay Dill)
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<i>Holocaust survivor Moshe Baran and his daughter Avi Baran Munro, head of school at CDS, light a candle together.</i>
Holocaust survivor Moshe Baran and his daughter Avi Baran Munro, head of school at CDS, light a candle together.
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<i>Community Day School students gather.</i>
Community Day School students gather.
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<i>CDS student Naomi Frim-Abrams, 11, plays her violin at the dedication.</i>
CDS student Naomi Frim-Abrams, 11, plays her violin at the dedication.
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Community Day School held a site dedication of the Keeping Tabs Holocaust Sculpture, Thursday, April 19.

Held in conjunction with YomHaShoa, Holocaust Remembrance Day, the event celebrated the sculpture project, started by history teacher Bill Walter in 1996. The sculpture will be shaped as the Star of David, comprised of 960 glass blocks and filled with 6 million alumminum can tabs. The tabs represent the number of Jewish lives lost during the Holocaust.

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