From the DW:
“Nazi victim files online go in
German archive”
The newly uploaded documents
contain information on 10 million people persecuted by the Nazis. The Arolsen
Archives hopes that by making the data available online, it will keep the
memories of Holocaust victims alive. With just a few clicks, a hand-drawn map
appears on the computer screen with the words "grave registration"
stamped in red ink at the top. The yellowed piece of paper depicts the final
resting place of a 33-year-old French man who was persecuted by the Nazis — his
gravesite colored in green pencil. This is just one of the 850,000 documents on
Nazi victims that the Arolsen Archives International Center on Nazi Persecution
has recently made available online — free and open to the public to search. "We
published them now because we have an index. You can search and find a name
that is inscribed on one of these documents. Before that it was not
possible," archive director Floriane Azoulay told DW. Over 10 million
people are mentioned in the documents, many of whom were in concentration
camps, death marches and forced labor camps during the Holocaust. The archive,
based in the central German town of Bad Arolsen, contains the world's most
comprehensive collection of documents about the victims and survivors of Nazi
persecution. Local German authorities were required to provide details on sites
were victims were buried Privacy concerns had kept access to the archive
largely restricted for decades, but the institution has opened its doors in
recent years and has been working to make its immense collection available to
all.
Millions of names
The recently published trove of
documents stems from the US-occupied zone in southern Germany, which was the
largest area occupied by the Allies after World War II. Although the Nazis
tried to destroy evidence of their crimes at the end of the war, written
records of people registered with local authorities, police, companies and
other institutions remained. The American, French, British and Soviet Allied
forces sought to document the crimes of the Nazi regime and find missing
persons. They ordered local German authorities to fill out forms detailing the
names of foreign nationals, German Jews and stateless persons who were
registered there. City and town officials were also told to provide information
on burial sites and to point out those locations on maps. "Very often you
don't have the names of the victims who were buried, but you have the
nationalities," Azoulay said. The Arolsen Archives launched its new online
archive in May this year, uploading more than 13 million documents
'Something they have never seen
before'
The response has been
"incredible" since the documents first went online a week ago, the
director added. The website, which was made with the help of the Yad Vashem
World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Jerusalem, has seen around 40,000 users
in one week — more than four times the normal visitor rate. People have also
written in to say how moved they were to be able to find information on their
relatives, just by entering a name in a search box. "In some instances,
they learn something new about the fate of a loved one and in many instances
it's the last trace of this person — something they have never seen
before," Azoulay said. "So there's a lot of emotion, a lot of gratitude
about that," she said.
Expanding to a new generation
Part of the boost in interest is
due in part to the archive's partnership with genealogy giant Ancestry. The
US-based company operates one of the world's largest online platforms for
genealogical research and was key in creating the index that made the documents
easily searchable. Over 67% of the requests the archive received last year were
from family members looking to find out more about their relatives. That figure
is now likely to grow. As part of the project cooperation, Ancestry was given
permission to also publish the documents on its website — a move that has exposed
a large group of family history enthusiasts to the archive. "The Arolsen
Archives have been working for eight decades, but we are still relatively
unknown," Azoulay said. She said she hopes that the media attention and
cooperation with Ancestry "will draw attention to the potential of the
archive and actually inspire people to look for their family members." Looking
to the future, the archive plans to continue publishing more of its 30 million
original documents online, with the lists from the British occupied zone due to
be released next year.
^ It is always a good thing when
historical documents are made open to the public and even more so when they are
made available online. The Arolsen Archives is an important source of
Holocaust-related material that needs to be studied and remembered. ^
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