'' in front of his villa in the Dobračina street When the
German army occupied Serbia in 1941, Kon relocated briefly to
Vrnjačka Banja, where he was arrested. He was moved to
Sajmište concentration camp near Belgrade, and later to Austria, where he was executed. After the end of the World War II and the establishment of the
Socialist Yugoslavia, the government decided to nationalize Kon's company and bookstore, as well as all of his former property. This was the basis for the establishment of the state-owned ''Prosveta. In 2016, the
Bavarian State Library returned 203 out of 600 books that the Nazis took from Geca Kon. The rest were not found and were probably destroyed in the
Allied bombing of Munich. Since there were no living relatives of Kon, the books were inherited by the
National Library of Serbia.
Bookstore In the early 20th century, Geca Kon's bookstore operated from several locales in the center of Belgrade, and in 1932 settled at the address 12 Knez Mihailova Street. Prior to
World War II it was the largest bookstore in the Balkans, with 700 pages of its 1938 catalogue featuring 16,000 titles. After the World War II, the bookstore became part of the Prosveta company, but the name "Geca Kon Bookstore" was kept. It kept its original interior until 1990 when it was renovated and modernized. In 1993, a memorial plaque dedicated to Geca Kon was unveiled inside the bookstore. In 2009, the building was declared
a monument of culture. Prosveta was
privatized in 2009, but the contract was annulled in 2010, after which the Government took over. This ignited fears that the bookstore might be closed for the first time since 1918. In June 2019, the bookstore was flooded after a storm and then closed for renovation in 2020. In 2020, Prosveta concluded a contract with state-owned publisher
Službeni Glasnik who took over the management of the bookstore. The renovated Geca Kon bookstore was opened in February 2021. It was remodeled in the spirit of the original design, with wood panels around the store windows and the entry door with the mechanism from the 1930s. The upper floor includes a memorial space with fully restored furniture and Kon's personal items. File:Knjižara Geca Kon05.jpg|Geca Kon bookstore in 2022, after renovation File:Geca Kon Bookstore 1.jpg|Geca Kon Bookstore interior in 2021 with the 1993 memorial plaque visible File:Geca Kon Bookstore 2.jpg|Geca Kon Bookstore, upper floor memorial space ==References==