The first trees for the forest were planted in 1951.[2] The World B'nai Brith Jewish service organization financed a significant portion of the planting of the trees by the Jewish National Fund.[3]
In addition to the trees planted in the forest to commemorate the victims of the Holocaust, the forest contains several memorials:
The Scroll of Fire, a large bronze sculpture by Nathan Rapoport, shaped like a double Torah scroll, one depicting scenes of destruction of the Jewish people in ancient and modern times, and the second depicting scenes of national rebirth.[3]
The Martyrs Cave, a natural cave that developed as a place of reflection and communion with the memory of Holocaust victims.[3]
The Anne Frank Memorial, a large cube depicting the annex in which the Frank family and others hid and a depiction of a chestnut tree that could be seen from the annex.[3]
^Ḳadman, Nogah; Yiftachel, Oren; Ḳadman, Nogah (2015). Erased from space and consciousness: Israel and the depopulated Palestinian villages of 1948. Translated by Reider, Dimi. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN978-0-253-01670-6.
^"הוחל בנטיעת 6 מיליון עצים ב״יער הקדושים״" [The planting of 6 million trees begins at the "Martyrs' Forest"]. The National Library of Israel: Historical Jewish Press (in Hebrew). Al Hamishmar. 1951-03-08. Retrieved 2019-02-10.