Holocaust memorial says it's unlikely purported 'Auschwitz tattoo kit'
was used on Jews
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[February 10, 2022]
By Dan Williams
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - A partial tattoo kit
offered at auction in Israel as an Auschwitz artefact is highly unlikely
to have been used on Jews at the Nazi concentration camp, a
court-ordered investigation has found following outcry from Holocaust
survivors.
The eight fingernail-sized steel dies, each lined with pins to form
numerals, were offered last year by a Jerusalem auctioneer who described
them as "the most shocking of Holocaust items" with a projected $30,000
to $40,000 price.
But the Tel Aviv District Court granted a request by survivors to
suspend the sale in November.
It asked the Yad Vashem World Holocaust Remembrance Center in Jerusalem
to try to authenticate the kit before the court rules whether the
auction can proceed.
The resulting five-page report, a copy of which was seen by Reuters,
says: "It would appear highly unlikely that these dies were used to
tattoo Jews, though this cannot be determined with absolute certainty."
The Yad Vashem report was due to be submitted to the court on Thursday.
A court ruling is expected at a later date.
More than 1.1 million people, around 90% of them Jewish, were killed at
Auschwitz, which was among a network of camps run by Nazi Germany on
occupied Polish soil during World War Two.
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A worker at an Israeli auction house organises dies from a tattoo
kit, which they say were used on inmates at Auschwitz death camp, in
Gilo, a Jewish settlement in the Israeli-Occupied West Bank November
2, 2021. Picture taken November 2, 2021. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun/File
Photo
The Yad Vashem report said that
while dies were used as of late 1941 to embed ink in prisoners'
upper-left chests, marking them with serial numbers, the
"overwhelming majority" of those victims were non-Jewish political
detainees or captured troops.
That method soon proved cumbersome and was replaced with tattooing
prisoners' arms using styluses, the report said, adding that
hundreds of thousands of Jews received such marks whereas just
"dozens or hundreds" were numbered using dies.
Inspection of the auctioned dies showed they "had clearly not been
used regularly" and had been cleaned, the report said.
It suggested they dated from 1949 - long after the war - as an
accompanying manufacturer's brochure was published that year. Such
dies were designed to brand livestock, the report noted.
The auctioneer, Meir Tzolman, declined a Reuters Television
interview request on Wednesday. Earlier he said he awaited the
court's ruling. Interviewed in November, he said the dies had been
certified as having come from Auschwitz but did not share any such
documentation with Reuters.
(Writing by Dan Williams; Editing by Howard Goller)
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