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Holocaust victims’ names join museum records

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Associated Press

When Bill Connelly heard that the heirs of a collector of Jewish memorial books were cleaning out the man’s library, he rushed to New York and fished dozens of the Yiddish-language volumes out of a municipal trash bin.

With their lists of residents from long-vanished European communities -- sometimes recorded street by street -- the books often are all that’s left of entire villages or neighborhoods consumed in the Nazi genocide of World War II.

To rescue a name is to rescue a life from oblivion, Holocaust survivors believe.

The yizkor books, from the Hebrew word for “remember,” are now on the shelves, alongside hundreds of other volumes, at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum where Connelly works.

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“It’s a gesture to the centuries: It says, this is who we are, and we will not disappear,” said Connelly, referring to the books he salvaged 10 years ago that formed the foundation of the museum’s library.

Now, the museum is gaining access to millions more names, the largest registry of Holocaust victims existing anywhere.

For more than 60 years, they were locked in a secretive archive in Germany that houses records scooped up by Allied troops from concentration camps, Nazi SS offices and postwar displaced-persons compounds.

In August, the International Tracing Service began transferring digital copies of its documents to the museum in Washington, and to other Holocaust institutions in Israel and Poland. The International Committee of the Red Cross administers the tracing archive.

It will take the tracing archive two more years to finish copying onto hard drives the 16 linear miles of paper now filling half a dozen buildings in the small German town of Bad Arolsen.

Sharing the files will allow survivors and victims’ relatives to see true images of documents -- transportation lists, Gestapo orders, camp registers, slave-labor booklets, death books -- that evince their tortures and that may have determined whether they lived or died.

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With the legal barriers nearly cleared away, the museum will be ready by early next year to help survivors track their history.

“Each day we are losing survivors,” said museum director Sara J. Bloomfield; many go to their graves without knowing where or when their loved ones died.

At Bad Arolsen, names fill rooms. Though now digitized and entered onto a database, the tracing archive retains all 50 million index cards bearing the names of victims, concentration camp inmates, slave laborers and displaced persons mentioned somewhere in the vast warehouse of papers.

Many are duplications, filed under different spellings, and the cards refer to about 17.5 million people, Jews and non-Jews. The cards alone occupy three cavernous rooms.

Survivors have been waiting for decades to rummage through the archive in search of names.

David Mermelstein, 78, now a Miami resident, will look for his brothers.

“My older brother was with me the whole time,” from Auschwitz through two other camps. Then they were separated when Mermelstein suffered a work accident. “About three months before we were liberated, that was the last time I saw him.”

Though the Holocaust and the Nazi reign must be among the most intensively studied 12 years in history, the files could still prove invaluable for new research. “It won’t change the big picture, but no scholars have ever had their hands on this material,” said Bloomfield.

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Joe White, a specialist on the earliest concentration camps created within weeks of Hitler’s 1933 rise to power, hopes to tap the files for new data on privileged groups such as “kapos,” the inmates who were overseers.

But White, who is with the museum’s Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, also is waiting for the chance to just explore. “Turning the pages, you find things you weren’t expecting.”

Scott H. O’Gara, a teacher of Holocaust studies at Suffolk County Community College in Riverhead, N.Y., said the tracing archive has a rich library of English-language testimony recorded by U.S. Army officers immediately after the war that could unearth new names of SS officers.

When complete, the arrival of the tracing archive will more than double the 40 million pages of records already compiled by the Washington museum, making it one of the world’s largest repositories of Holocaust resource material along with Yad Vashem in Jerusalem.

The Israeli memorial already has a database of 3.3 million names of the 6 million Jews slaughtered in the Holocaust and has assembled a team to comb through the newly acquired tracing service material for more.

But even with the tracing service’s files, the names of millions of victims are lost forever. The Nazis destroyed much of the evidence of their crimes in the final months of the war, and millions more vanished in Eastern Europe, where record-keeping was less meticulous.

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The archive was created to trace the fate of people who went missing during the war and in the chaos after the German surrender on May 8, 1945, and to reunite families. Later, survivors turned to the service’s archives for evidence to support compensation claims for their persecution or property.

But survivors never had direct access to the records themselves. Inquirers submitted applications and often waited years to obtain bare-bones information in a form-letter response.

Missing was the context -- the “feel factor” of seeing their names as inscribed by wartime German officials.

Laymen will be able to browse the archive from museum computers, but they will need professional helpers to find specific information because of the arcane system the Red Cross archivists set up over the years.

But at least they will walk away with copies of the documents on which their names appear “so that they have something tangible to pass on to their children and grandchildren,” Bloomfield said.

People hoping to discover the fate of relatives can submit inquiries by the Internet, mail or fax to the International Tracing Service, the Washington museum or Yad Vashem. Scholars will have to conduct their research on site.

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The tracing service in Germany has admitted few outsiders over the last 60 years. Now it is open to visitors, and though it prefers they make appointments, “survivors and victims are always welcome,” says director Reto Meister.

Prying open the archive took years of pressure on the reluctant ITS and the 11-nation commission that governs it. Seeing the survivor community rapidly dwindle, the U.S. Holocaust museum began the campaign in 2001, with the State Department joining the final push.

Opponents argued that the files were subject to strict German privacy laws and that allowing free access by survivors and researchers would detract from the archive’s mission.

The May 2006 decision to amend the 1955 rules was met with repeated delays in implementation. The commission decided each nation must formally ratify the amendments, a process expected to take six months that dragged on for 18 months.

The Greek parliament approved the amendments Oct. 23 -- the last of the 11 countries. The archive was officially pronounced open Wednesday after Athens filed its ratification documents in Berlin.

The commission members are the United States, Britain, Germany, Israel, Poland, France, Italy, Belgium, Greece, Luxembourg and the Netherlands.

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The key to finding anything is the central name index. Though names are searchable by computer, the index gives a bare outline of personal information and a vague indication of how to find the actual documents. No software exists to electronically search and read the documents.

But there will be a guide of sorts to the archive’s contents. Over the years, the tracing service kept an inventory of documents added to its storehouse.

“For years, the ITS refused to say what was there in the archive,” said Paul Shapiro, director of the museum’s Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies. It was only once the inventory became available that outsiders had evidence of its vast scope.

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Associated Press investigative researcher Randy Herschaft in New York contributed to this report.

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