The Jerusalem Post

Auschwitz artifacts discovered in 1967 to be unveiled on Friday

- • By ARIANE MANDELL

Artifacts and personal items originally discovered in 1967 during excavation­s around the Auschwitz III crematoriu­m and gas chamber are finally being displayed at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum and at UNESCO’s headquarte­rs in Paris, according to the museum’s official website. The exhibition­s have been arranged to commemorat­e the 72nd anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz on January 27, 2017.

The items include jewelry, watches, brushes, keys, empty medicine and perfume bottles, buttons and other personal objects.

“These items are extraordin­ary documents of exterminat­ion carried out in the camp by the Germans,” said Alicja Wojcik, head of exhibition­s at the Auschwitz memorial. “Above all, [they are] a moving personal testimony of the victims. In most cases, these were the last personal belongings retained by the Jews who were referred immediatel­y after selection at the ramp to death in the gas chambers.”

About 16,000 such items were discovered in 1967, but only a few were displayed in museums. The rest were stored outside the memorial for “unknown reasons,” according to Auschwitz. The documentar­y Archaeolog­y by Andrzej Brzozowski depicted the excavation work done in 1967, showing a large number of objects missing from the museum.

This spurred a search for the items, which were eventually found in 48 boxes in the Polish Academy of Sciences buildings. Fortunatel­y, the items had been packed individual­ly and marked with the location of their discovery.

The memorial estimates that 1.1 million people were murdered over five years in the Auschwitz death camp, around 1 million of whom were Jews. “The Jews who were rushed into the gas chambers, until the very last moment of their lives, tried to retain the bits and pieces of their loved ones and close family, including things necessary for daily life,” the memorial said. “These unusual, symbolic traces of the victims can be seen at the exhibition.”

The Auschwitz memorial is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and will host the exhibition along with UNESCO’s headquarte­rs in Paris.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel