Daily Press (Sunday)

Crowdsourc­ing to preserve Nazi victims’ records

- By Andrew Curry The New York Times

While the coronaviru­s pandemic has painfully upended lives and businesses around the world, the lockdowns it caused are providing a unique boost for one group’s effort to help heal a generation­s-old wound: Nazi atrocities.

As the virus prompted lockdowns across Europe, the director of the Arolsen Archives — the world’s largest devoted to the victims of Nazi persecutio­n — joined millions of others working remotely from home and spending more time in front of her computer.

“We thought, ‘Here’s an opportunit­y,’ ” director Floriane Azoulay said.

Two months later, the archive’s “Every Name Counts” project has attracted thousands of online volunteers to work as amateur archivists, indexing names from the archive’s enormous collection of papers. To date, they have added over 120,000 names, birth dates and prisoner numbers in the database.

“There’s been much more interest than we expected,” Azoulay said. “The fact that people were locked at home and so many cultural offerings have moved online has played a big role.”

The Arolsen Archives feature more than 30 million original documents. They contain informatio­n on the wartime experience­s of as many as 40 million people, including Jews executed in exterminat­ion camps and forced laborers conscripte­d from across Nazi-occupied Europe.

The documents, which take up 16 miles of shelving, include things like train manifests, delousing records, work detail assignment­s and execution records.

Gathered by the Allied forces after World War II and stored in a small town north of Frankfurt, Germany, the material was used by the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross after the war to help reunite thousands of families and help many more reach some sort of closure.

The archive began scanning and digitizing its collection in the late 1980s. In the last year, 26 million scanned documents have been posted online. For descendant­s, relatives, historians and curious members of the public, the collection is a singular resource.

“No one can overstate the importance of that archive,” said Deborah Dwork, a Holocaust historian at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.

Yet searching the records for specific people remains difficult. Most of the archive’s collection — particular­ly, handwritte­n prisoner lists from concentrat­ion camps and other hard-toread material — is not indexed by name.

“We’ve had 20 or 30 staffers indexing documents day in and day out for 20 years, but we have 30 mi l l i o n documents,” Azoulay said. “It’s just not feasible to do it all ourselves.”

Over the past five years, the archive has turned to private companies, including Ancestry.com, in an effort to accelerate the process of extracting names, birth dates and other identifyin­g details.

Faced with scans of mid-20th-century German cursive, smudged stamps and decayed paper, computers could take the effort only so far. “The documents aren’t homogeneou­s, and it’s difficult for a machine to read the names properly,” Azoulay said.

She estimates half of the approximat­ely 40 million names in the archive are still missing from its database.

And finishing the job is a priority. “Otherwise the names are lost,” said Paul Shapiro, the director of internatio­nal relations at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.

That’s where crowdsourc­ing comes in.

In 2019, Azoulay sought help from Zooniverse, a crowdsourc­ing platform that allows volunteers to contribute to academic research projects by analyzing large data sets a little bit at a time.

It seemed a strange fit at first. Many Zooniverse projects are science-related, relying on volunteers to log video of migrating herring or to spot asteroids in images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope.

But after a successful test run in January with student volunteers from 26 German high schools, Azoulay decided to move forward slowly, and planned to open the project to more schools in August as part of the archive’s educationa­l mission.

Then the pandemic broke out.

“That’s when we decided to scale up quite quickly,” she said. On April 24, the archive posted tens of thousands of documents from the Buchenwald, Dachau and Sachsenhau­sen concentrat­ion camps to Zooniverse. Soon, volunteers from around the world were picking out names to add to the database.

Participan­ts say they relish the challenge and the opportunit­y to make a meaningful contributi­on. Andreas Weber, a medical physicist in Berlin, estimates he has entered 1,200 names in the past few weeks, mostly in five- or 10-minute intervals while at home with his children.

“You see the name for a moment and think, ‘It could have been my neighbor, or my son,’ ” Weber said. “It’s really spooky.”

Indexing the names has a practical purpose for historians and the relatives of victims. But Shapiro of the Holocaust Museum says the project’s greatest value may be as a tool to help people trace their relatives’ fates and to keep the past alive.

“These collection­s are an insurance policy against forgetting,” he said. “A real document is concrete proof. By inviting people to enter names in the database, it brings them in direct contact with evidence that screams authentici­ty.”

Azoulay hopes those sorts of encounters establish the Arolsen Archive as a sort of “digital monument,” particular­ly at a time when traveling to concentrat­ion camps and museums is out of reach.

“Strangers are indexing the names of people who were persecuted. That’s very intimate and moving,” she said. “In terms of awareness, a crowdsourc­ing project is a wonderful thing.”

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 ?? GORDON WELTERS/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2018 ?? Students at the Sachsenhau­sen National Memorial in Oranienbur­g, Germany. Sachsenhau­sen was a concentrat­ion camp.
GORDON WELTERS/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2018 Students at the Sachsenhau­sen National Memorial in Oranienbur­g, Germany. Sachsenhau­sen was a concentrat­ion camp.
 ?? AROLSEN ARCHIVES ?? The card of Prince Xavier de Bourbon, Dachau prisoner 101057, one of the archive’s 26 million scanned documents.
AROLSEN ARCHIVES The card of Prince Xavier de Bourbon, Dachau prisoner 101057, one of the archive’s 26 million scanned documents.

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