Holocaust Records Opened After More Than 60 Years
By Brandee Teer, published Dec 22, 2006
Published Content: 107 Total Views: 48,339 Favorited By: 7 CPs
In the spring of 1945, Germany fell and the Allies raided concentration camps to free those left behind collected all the documentation they could find. The documents were taken to Bad Arolsen, a town in the middle of Germany, where they were sorted, filed and locked away. Recently these files have been opened and made available to the public. The storerooms consisted of 16 miles of shelving that held the stories of 17 million victims.
The stories detailed not only those of the Jews but also slave laborers, political prisoners and homosexuals. To reopen these files is like opening a time vault and letting the past seep out. The files contained Gestapo arrest warrants and jewelry lost like freedom.
The chief archivist, Udo Jost maintains the factory and keeps the records organized. Contained with in the millions of files is a list of 1000 prisoners who were saved by a factory owner who told the Nazis he needed the prisoners for labor. This list contained 700 men and 300 women and is better known as Schindler's list. Also contained within is the file of a young girl and her paper trail from Amsterdam to Bergen-Belsen where she died at age 15. This girl was best known as Anne Frank.
In notebooks labeled "Totenbuch" or "death books" you can read the names of millions of victims who were killed in the concentration camps. The names of those executed in the gas chambers in places like Auschwitz were not recorded. The Nazis meticulous records included the names, numbers and amount of lice found for each prisoner. The Nazis did not want disease manifesting in the camps and documented the number and size of head lice found on each person.
April 20th was an extremely deadly day in one of the camps; a prisoner was shot every two minutes for an hour and a half. This was a Hitler's birthday and the executions his gift.
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Did You Know?
Contained with in the millions of files is a list of 1000 prisoners who were saved by a factory owner who told the Nazis he needed the prisoners for labor. This list became known as Schindler's list.
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