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Poland, Warsaw, 2023

The first burials in the Jewish cemetery in Bródno took place since the 1840s. Officially, the cemetery was established in 1780 by Szmul Jakubowicz Zbytkower. Its area covered 14.6 hectares. Between 1743 and 1940, 250,000 people were buried here. At the behest of the communist authorities, the tombstones that survived after the war were torn out and used as building material. The current fence surrounds the 13.5 hectare cemetery, with the rest remaining outside the ownership of the Jewish Community of Warsaw. Nothing protects the graves of several thousand Jewish fellow citizens from alcoholic libations or from defecating animals and people. Adjacent to the walls of the Jewish cemetery is a walkway of residential buildings and the Catholic cemetery, which was opened for burials on January 13, 1885. Libera spent years looking at the Jewish cemetery from the side of the Catholic cemetery and residential buildings. In this photo, he reversed the perspective of the gaze.