
The International Auschwitz Committee (IAK) has called on an auction house in western Germany to cancel its auction of Holocaust artefacts scheduled for Monday.
The auction of personal documents belonging to victims of Nazi Germany is considered by Holocaust survivors and their relatives to be a "cynical and shameless undertaking," said IAK executive vice president Christoph Heubner in Berlin on Saturday.
The suffering of all those who were persecuted and murdered by the Nazis is being exploited for commercial gain, he said. Documents relating to persecution and the Holocaust belong to the families of those who were persecuted.
He said such documents should be displayed in museums or in exhibitions at memorial sites and not be degraded to commercial objects. "We call on those responsible at the auction house to show human decency and cancel the auction," said Heubner.
The Felzmann auction house in Neuss, near Dusseldorf, plans to start the auction on Monday under the title "The System of Terror Vol. II 1933–1945."
According to the IAK, items on offer include letters from concentration camps, Gestapo index cards and other documents from perpetrators. Many of the items contain personal information and the names of those affected.
The online catalogue includes an anti-Jewish propaganda poster and a Jewish star from the Buchenwald concentration camp with "signs of wear." The auction house could not be reached for comment.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Aid sent by ambulance to Ukraine front line - 2
Scientists map of old Mars river basins for the 1st time. These could be great places to search for ancient life - 3
It Shouldn’t Be Here: Rescuers Race to Save Whale Stranded in Rare Spot - 4
4 Energy-Proficient Clothes washers to Consider in 2024 - 5
New electric car registrations rise sharply in Germany in March
Toyota’s Next Big Sports Car Might Apparently Be a Turbocharged All-Paw Beast
How will the universe end?
New study measures titanium in Apollo rock to uncover Moon’s early chemistry
Illustrations Gained from a Crosscountry Excursion
Infants will no longer receive hepatitis B vaccine at birth, CDC announces
China resumes flights to North Korea after a six-year pause
It's been 20 years since MTV's golden couple split. These producers saw it all unravel.
Gaza Strip sees flooding after heavy rainfall
Make your choice for the PS5 game that you love playing with companions!













