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Philadelphia's Holocaust Memorial, Enhanced For A New Generation

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) -- Philadelphia's Holocaust Memorial, at 16th and the Parkway, is about to get a major renovation. Plans for a new Memorial Plaza were unveiled Wednesday.

It was a huge victory in 1964 when Philadelphia became the first city in the country to have a Holocaust Memorial, a Nathan Rapoport sculpture evoking the terror and tumult of Nazi-engineered death. But, as Rabbi Michael Berenbaum noted, at the unveiling of new plans for the site, that sculpture was designed for a generation that had lived through the Holocaust and knew its horrors.

A memorial that speaks to one generation must be renewed for a second generation.

Berenbaum says the makeover--with educational panels and new plantings--will include Philadelphia history because the freedoms born here are the antithesis of the dictatorship that led to the Holocaust.

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Holocaust survivor, Miriam Cane and Mayor Jim Kenney on hand for unveiling of plans for new Philly memorial (credit: Pat Loeb/CBS)

As people walk this great Parkway in this very important city that they pause for a moment and stop taking it for granted and get a sense of tremendous gratitude and appreciation for what Philadelphia has contributed to the nation.

The Philadelphia Holocaust Remembrance Foundation predicts the Plaza will become a "destination landmark."

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