Memoria [EN] Nr 27 (12/2019) | Page 23

‘Currently, the Digital Repository has over 100 thousand names of the birth or residential places of deportees in its databases. Listed in the databases are citizens of several dozen countries, and thousands of professions that they performed are mentioned. They include data from the oldest people born in 1882 to children born in the camp in the last days before the liberation. Scientific research that would have been impossible two decades ago is now conducted by researchers who visit the Memorial. The created databases and scanned documents allow for comprehensive historical, sociological, genealogical or even medical analysis,’ says Antończyk.

A dozen or so people work on the analysis of data for the digital repository databases. The repository and the archive cooperate with specialists in interpretation. Information is supplemented regularly by the relatives of prisoners. Private individuals continue to donate documents, photographs or their scans. ‘Thanks to long-standing contacts and sharing of experiences with other memorials and institutions commemorating the victims of the Second World War, new data on prisoners and deportees are still being obtained, their identities are being reconstructed and documentation is being completed. Through this exchange of information, research works have become more comprehensive and complementary,’ noted Krzysztof Antończyk.

At present, the Digital Repository is conducting research projects in collaboration with Arolsen Archives, the Bavarian memorials Flossenbuerg and Dachau, Yad Vashem and the Shoah Foundation. Under this cooperation, we have obtained a total of 410,000 scans of documents and more than 250,000 entries of deportees. The reconstruction does not only apply to the identity of individual persons, but also entire prisoner transports.

‘The best example is the analysis of information contained in documents obtained from the Arolsen Archives. They offer a wide range of possibilities for the reconstruction of documentation created in the camp. The same is true of the partially reconstructed transport list of prisoners transferred from Auschwitz to Neuengamme on 25 August 1944. So far, only 270 names were recognised. At the moment, of the 750 men transferred to KL Neuengamme on that day, 550 people have already been identified," said Ewa Bazan, head of the research project implemented with the Arolsen Archives.

As part of this cooperation, data on the largest group of deportees to Auschwitz, over 400,000 Hungarian Jews, is also being reproduced. In 2019, research work was underway as part of the project to reconstruct the identities of more than 30,000 people, prisoners and Poles deported from KL Auschwitz to the KL Flossenbürg and KL Dachau concentration camps.

‘In their accounts, former prisoners often speak of the conviction they had in the camp, that the truth will never pass beyond the wires, their names will be forgotten, and yet, each person has a name. Our mission is simple - to restore to our collective memory as many names as possible’ Piotr Cywiński emphasised.