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Wednesday, December 24, 2025 |
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| Fairfield University to receive Holocaust memorial sculpture in 2026 |
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Bronze Holocaust memorial sculpture She Wouldnt Take Off Her Boots (artist Victoria Milstein), in Greensboro, N.C.
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FAIRFIELD, CONN.- In 2026, Fairfield University and the Fairfield University Art Museum will receive the generous gift of an artwork that embodies the enduring human spirit and serves as a reminder to stand against injustice and promote peacea bronze Holocaust memorial sculpture titled She Wouldnt Take Off Her Boots.
She Wouldnt Take Off Her Boots honors five Jewish women who stood in the face of ultimate terror during the Holocaust and refused to comply. The piece features a bronze camera that faces the women immortalized in metal, symbolizing the Nazi photographers lens through which the victims last moments were documented.
"The Museum is delighted to accept this monument and to have it take its place among our outdoor sculptures on campus," said Carey Mack Weber, the museum's Frank and Clara Meditz Executive Director. "We are looking forward to sharing the educational opportunities this artwork brings with all of our communitieson campus, across Connecticut, and beyond."
Created by esteemed artist Victoria Milstein, She Wouldnt Take Off Her Boots was first installed in LeBauer Park in Greensboro, N.C., in April of 2023. There, Fairfield native Paul Burger experienced this works profound impact and felt compelled to bring the memorial to his community. His effort led to the founding of Shoah Memorial Fairfield, Connecticutthe nonprofit gifting the sculpture to the Universityand to Milsteins agreement to create a second iteration of the work. An accompanying endowment fund at the University will ensure the memorials maintenance and care in perpetuity.
The story behind the sculpture begins on December 15, 1941, near Liepāja, Latvia, when German and Latvian forces murdered 2,749 Jewsmostly women and childrenover three days on the beach at ķēde. According to the Shoah Memorial of Fairfield, Connecticut, website:
The women were forced to undress before their execution. One among them, Frume Purve, stood defiant, refusing to remove her boots. This quiet yet powerful act of resistance, alongside four othersSorella Epstein, Roza Epstein, Mia-Malka Epstein, and Emma Epsteinembodied unshakable courage and dignity in the face of certain death. To this day, Frumes brave act has become a symbol of hope, defiance, and the enduring strength of the human spirit. A Nazi photographer captured these womens final moments, which formed the basis for the memorial. This photo was preserved by a Jewish worker who risked his life to make a copy.
Witnessing how weve become numbed to relentless violenceschool shootings, political assassinations, and terrorist attacksthis monument urges us to retain our humane sensibilities, said Special Assistant to the President for Arts and Culture Philip Eliasoph, PhD. Through her harrowing artistic vision, Victoria Milstein forces our confrontation with unspeakable evil.
Milstein shared that "as the creator of the monument, I am so grateful to Fairfield University for undertaking this important initiative to further Holocaust education in its community. The monument will be a sacred space for reflection and meditation and enable all visitors to gather together in unity against oppression and persecution. Through the voice of the women in the sculpture She Wouldnt Take Off Her Boots, Fairfield University will articulate its commitment to fight all forms of hatred, bigotry, and bias."
Receiving She Wouldnt Take Off Her Boots supports the Universitys efforts to create spaces for interreligious dialogue, and particularly spaces for difficult dialogue to be experienced through a lens of compassion and empathy. A dedicated curriculum for both middle and high school students is connected to the piece, including a self-guided tour and full-length documentary film.
Were often reminded by President Nemecin small classroom settings and large civic placeshow the fundamental work in our teaching is to animate the driving spirit of our enduring motto: Per Fidem Ad Plenam VeritatemThrough Faith to the Fullness of Truth, said Dr. Eliasoph. As our outdoor sculpture collection on campus expands, its encouraging to see that bronze statues honoring pioneering Jesuit saints are being joined with new monuments demonstrating the depth of our sense of faith enhanced with the universality of love.
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