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158 MIN LESEZEIT

DONALD THE DESTROYER

BY KURT EICHENWALD

DUST SWIRLED and jackhammers pounded outside the Bonwit Teller building in Manhattan as undocumented immigrants tore apart the facade. It was June 5, 1980, and a sense of bitterness hung over the work site that afternoon; paychecks were often weeks late, but since the Poles didn’t have legal status in the United States, there was little they could do about it.

The exterior they were destroying was an architectural masterpiece—bronze, platinum, hammered aluminum, glazed ceramic and tinted glass that shimmered like jewelry. Many New Yorkers had hoped the grandest portion would survive; curators from the Metropolitan Museum of Art had asked the developer to carefully remove the two bas-relief sculpture panels so they could be restored and put on public display. But that afternoon, the laborers, acting on orders from the developer, smashed the 50-year-old art deco panels into a rubble of stone, pebble and dirt.

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Newsweek International
28th October 2016
ANSICHT IM LAGER

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