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Data on Holocaust victims made available to public

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  • Data on Holocaust victims made available to public

    Jan. 19, 2008, 7:01PM
    Data on Holocaust victims made available to public
    Museum shares records on about 17 million victims
    By ERIC ROSENBERG
    2008 Hearst News Service

    WASHINGTON - The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has begun helping
    Holocaust survivors, their family members and researchers gain access
    to a huge troveof Nazi-era records detailing the fates of millions of
    victims.

    Museum officials last week announced they were making available via
    online request digital copies of the records, which include
    Nazi-generated documents on concentration camp rosters, slave labor
    camps, transport manifests, ghetto inhabitants, and arrest
    records. They also include allied documents on victims housed at
    displaced persons camps after the end of World War II in1945.

    To access the data Museum officials hope the documents provide people
    with the details of the fates of loved ones.

    The public may access the archives free of charge by visiting the
    museum's Web site at www.ushmm.org and following the links for access
    to the International Tracing Service collection.

    Requesters must submit an online form that asks for the name of the
    victim, name of the victim's mother and father, birth place town and
    country, birth date, residence before war, and known locations during
    the war.

    People may also submit the form via regular mail or fax. The 50
    researchers will give priority to requests from Holocaust survivors
    and their families. The request will be forwarded to a museum
    researcher, who is supposed to reply within six to eight weeks.

    Significant dates

    The documents contain victim-level details such as the specific unit a
    prisoner was assigned to, whether he or she became ill and was sent to
    an infirmary or whether he or she fell sick and was then shot. Some
    contain signatures of victims as they signed forms along the way to a
    death camp. The Germans kept meticulous records of their deeds.

    "When you are able to show the family of a victim a signature of that
    victim from that documentation, that may be the only thing they have
    ever seen connecting to a moment when the victim was alive," said Paul
    Shapiro, a director at the museum's Center for Advanced Holocaust
    Studies.

    In Judaism, family members light what is known as a Yahrzeit candle on
    the anniversary of a loved one's death followed by the recitation of
    the Kaddish, the prayer for the dead. Saying Kaddish on the
    anniversary is one of the most important expressions of faith a Jew
    performs.

    But more than six decades after the mass murder led by Germany, many
    Jews have never known when their loved ones died. The documents will
    finally allow many who lost relatives to recite Kaddish on the exact
    anniversary.

    "To be able to show families - that is an overwhelming
    experience,"Shapiro said.

    Other museums to follow

    The archive was compiled by allied forces from Nazi records after the
    war. Eventually, the archive, dubbed the International Tracing
    Service collection, was handed over to the Red Cross and housed in Bad
    Arolsen, Germany.

    The collection was off limits to researchers and the general public
    since the end of the war nearly 63 years ago. The Red Cross had
    allowed limited access to Holocaust survivors and their families.

    The 11 nations of the International Tracing Service's governing body
    voted in 2006 to make the documents available to the public. Those
    nations are Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Israel, Italy,
    Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, Britain and the United States.

    The collection was opened to the public in Germany for the first time
    in November.

    In addition to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, two other museums,
    one in Israel and one in Poland, also plan to obtain digital copies of
    the Nazi-era documents.

    The release of the collection is expected to help pare a backlog of
    over 400,000 requests for information at the German facility from
    Holocaust survivors and their families.

    [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])
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