The China Mail - German archive where victims of the Nazis come back to life

USD -
AED 3.672498
AFN 66.489639
ALL 83.872087
AMD 382.479961
ANG 1.789982
AOA 916.999985
ARS 1450.743702
AUD 1.54464
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.699936
BAM 1.69722
BBD 2.01352
BDT 122.007836
BGN 1.695365
BHD 0.376995
BIF 2949.338748
BMD 1
BND 1.304378
BOB 6.907594
BRL 5.359498
BSD 0.999679
BTN 88.558647
BWP 13.450775
BYN 3.407125
BYR 19600
BZD 2.010578
CAD 1.412195
CDF 2220.999879
CHF 0.806765
CLF 0.02406
CLP 943.870277
CNY 7.12675
CNH 7.121955
COP 3810.2
CRC 502.442792
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 95.686244
CZK 21.085038
DJF 177.719807
DKK 6.46671
DOP 64.320178
DZD 130.472159
EGP 47.297403
ERN 15
ETB 153.49263
EUR 0.86615
FJD 2.28525
FKP 0.766404
GBP 0.761505
GEL 2.71497
GGP 0.766404
GHS 10.92632
GIP 0.766404
GMD 73.509134
GNF 8677.881382
GTQ 7.6608
GYD 209.15339
HKD 7.77536
HNL 26.286056
HRK 6.525605
HTG 130.827172
HUF 334.42202
IDR 16704
ILS 3.272635
IMP 0.766404
INR 88.66155
IQD 1309.660176
IRR 42112.501708
ISK 126.640364
JEP 0.766404
JMD 160.35857
JOD 0.709002
JPY 152.931497
KES 129.149764
KGS 87.450218
KHR 4012.669762
KMF 427.999978
KPW 900.033283
KRW 1447.940003
KWD 0.30693
KYD 0.833167
KZT 526.13127
LAK 21717.265947
LBP 89523.367365
LKR 304.861328
LRD 182.946302
LSL 17.373217
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.466197
MAD 9.311066
MDL 17.114592
MGA 4508.159378
MKD 53.394772
MMK 2099.044592
MNT 3585.031206
MOP 8.005051
MRU 39.997917
MUR 45.999865
MVR 15.404993
MWK 1733.486063
MXN 18.621425
MYR 4.183006
MZN 63.960023
NAD 17.373217
NGN 1438.210482
NIO 36.78522
NOK 10.215903
NPR 141.693568
NZD 1.77559
OMR 0.384504
PAB 0.999779
PEN 3.375927
PGK 4.279045
PHP 58.9145
PKR 282.679805
PLN 3.68211
PYG 7081.988268
QAR 3.643566
RON 4.406497
RSD 101.52698
RUB 81.499636
RWF 1452.596867
SAR 3.750504
SBD 8.223823
SCR 14.35585
SDG 600.503157
SEK 9.57037
SGD 1.304195
SHP 0.750259
SLE 23.197576
SLL 20969.499529
SOS 571.349231
SRD 38.503505
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.260533
SVC 8.747304
SYP 11056.895466
SZL 17.359159
THB 32.393501
TJS 9.227278
TMT 3.5
TND 2.959939
TOP 2.342104
TRY 42.112499
TTD 6.773954
TWD 30.962802
TZS 2459.807029
UAH 42.066455
UGX 3491.096532
UYU 39.813947
UZS 11966.746503
VES 227.27225
VND 26315
VUV 122.169446
WST 2.82328
XAF 569.234174
XAG 0.020817
XAU 0.000251
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.801686
XDR 0.70875
XOF 569.231704
XPF 103.489719
YER 238.495377
ZAR 17.383798
ZMK 9001.199567
ZMW 22.61803
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    76

    0%

  • SCS

    -0.1750

    15.755

    -1.11%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.78

    -0.21%

  • RIO

    0.1340

    69.194

    +0.19%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.94

    -0.29%

  • NGG

    1.2800

    76.65

    +1.67%

  • AZN

    2.6300

    83.78

    +3.14%

  • BP

    0.2160

    35.896

    +0.6%

  • BCC

    -0.5500

    70.83

    -0.78%

  • GSK

    0.4150

    47.105

    +0.88%

  • RELX

    -1.2000

    43.38

    -2.77%

  • BCE

    0.6500

    23.04

    +2.82%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    15

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    0.4500

    54.33

    +0.83%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.76

    -0.07%

  • VOD

    0.0950

    11.365

    +0.84%

German archive where victims of the Nazis come back to life
German archive where victims of the Nazis come back to life / Photo: © AFP/File

German archive where victims of the Nazis come back to life

If it wasn't for the Arolsen Archives, half-sisters Sula Miller and Helen Schaller would never have met.

Text size:

American Miller and German Schaller only recently discovered they had the same father -- a Holocaust survivor who emigrated to the US.

Miller "contacted us because she was looking for information about her father", said Floriane Azoulay, director of the Arolsen Archives, the world's largest repository of information on the victims and survivors of the Nazi regime.

Mendel Mueller, a Jew born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was incarcerated in two Nazi concentration camps: Buchenwald in northern Germany and Auschwitz in what was then occupied Poland.

An investigation of the archives revealed he had another daughter, Helen, who was still alive and living in Germany.

"Thanks to us, the two women got to know each other," Azoulay said.

Eighty years after the end of World War II, people all over the world are still discovering the fate of their family members sent to Adolf Hitler's Nazi death camps.

The vast Arolsen Archives, located in the quaint spa town of Bad Arolsen in central Germany, contain millions of documents and objects.

When Miller contacted the archive to find out about her father, researchers stumbled upon a 1951 letter from his wife looking for his whereabouts.

Shortly after the war, Mueller had married a German woman -- the mother of his daughter Helen, born in 1947.

But some time later, he left for the US without her and started a new life there, marrying an Austrian woman -- who gave birth to Sula in 1960.

Four years after Miller's initial inquiry, investigators from Bad Arolsen managed to track Helen down and the two sisters met for the first time last year.

"Their physical resemblance was striking," Azoulay said.

The two had complicated and conflicting views on their father, but "their meeting helped them make peace with the past", she said.

- Watches, wallets and rings -

Although 90 percent of the material held by the Arolsen Archive has now been digitised, the complex still stores some 30 million original documents on almost 17.5 million people.

There are also thousands of items such as watches, rings and wallets collected from the old Nazi camps.

The archive was originally set up by the Allies in early 1946 as the International Tracing Service to help people find relatives who had disappeared during the war.

It mostly dealt with Jews but also Roma, homosexuals, political dissidents and "racially pure" children kidnapped by the Nazis as part of a programme to address the falling birth rate.

Bad Arolsen was chosen because it had escaped Allied bombing and had a working telephone network, and because of its location at the centre of Germany's four occupation zones (French, American, British and Soviet).

At first the service was run by a curious mix of members of the Allied forces, Holocaust survivors from all over Europe and Germans -- including former members of the Nazi party.

But from the 1950s onwards, as many of the survivors left the country, German staff numbers increased.

Today, the archive has around 200 employees, assisted by some 50 volunteers around the world.

And it is still handling around 20,000 enquiries per year, according to Azoulay, often from children or grandchildren of victims or survivors who want to know what happened to them.

Like Abraham Ben, born to Polish-Jewish parents in a displaced persons camp in Bamberg, southern Germany, in May 1947.

- No grandparents -

Now almost 80, Ben is still hoping to shed light on the fate of his father's family, who were left behind when he escaped from the Warsaw Ghetto.

"There is a high probability that they died in the camps," he said.

Ben's father "never talked about (the Holocaust)... and we never asked him about it. We felt it was too painful for him."

Almost no one had grandparents in the centre for Jewish refugees where Ben was born because the elderly -- too weak to work -- were first to be killed in the camps.

"At the age of 10, I realised other children had grandparents because I went to a German school and my classmates would describe the gifts they had given them at Christmas."

Ben said he is hoping to find "cousins who may have survived" among the children of his father's five brothers and sisters.

The archives at Bad Arolsen include documents issued by the Nazi party, such as Gestapo arrest warrants, lists of people to be transported to the camps and camp registers.

The documents are often surprisingly detailed, given the low chances of survival of the people listed in them.

In Buchenwald, the camp register kept a record of every prisoner's height, eye and hair colour, facial features, marital status, children, religion and which languages they spoke, as well as their name, date of birth and deportation number.

- 'Best day of her life' -

From the beginning, the records were sorted according to a phonetic alphabet, since the same name can be spelled differently in different languages.

"For example, there are more than 800 ways to write 'Abrahamovicz'," said Nicole Dominicus, head of archive administration.

Later the archives were expanded to include files compiled by the Allies, as well as correspondence between the Red Cross and the Nazi administration.

The files also contain letters written by people searching for their lost relatives.

In a letter written to the International Tracing Service in 1948, a mother who survived Auschwitz asks about her missing daughter, who she was separated from in the camp.

Volunteers working for the archives outside Germany also help trawl through records in other countries.

Manuela Golc, a volunteer in Poland, recently met a 93-year-old woman to hand over a pair of earrings and a watch that had belonged to her mother, who was deported in 1944 after the Warsaw Uprising.

"She told me it was the best day of her life," Golc said, with tears in her eyes.

German Achim Werner, 58, was "shocked" when the archives contacted him to let him know they had his grandfather's wedding ring, taken from him when he arrived at the Dachau concentration camp.

Werner had visited the camp near Munich several times, on school excursions and as an adult, without knowing that his grandfather had been held there.

"We knew that he was detained in 1940, but nothing after that," he said.

Werner does not know why his grandfather was imprisoned, and since the archives have no further information about him, he probably never will.

But he wants to keep the man's memory alive and has given the wedding ring to his daughter.

"She will wear it as a pendant and then pass it on to her children," he said.

J.Liv--ThChM