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New Shoah-Related Lists Database Now Online


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Now More Than Ever
Education
   ► Holocaust Education: Directions and Challenges
   ► Building Bridges of Understanding
   ► Activities in Europe
   ► New on the International School’s website Educators’ Conference
   ► “Remember the Days of Old”
The Names Database:
“I waited 65 years to give her a kiss”

Facing the Future of Holocaust Remembrance
The American Society for Yad Vashem 25: Years of Dedication to Holocaust Remembrance
Eli Zborowski: A Life Mission
Gaining Another Perspective: The Yad Vashem Delegation to Poland, 2006
New Publications
News
   ►
Joseph (Tommy) Lapid Appointed Chairman of the Council
   ► New Shoah-Related Lists Database Now Online
   ► New on the Web
   ► Events June – September 2006
   ► New Display: Drawings of the Trial of Klaus Barbie, “The Butcher of Lyon”
   ► News from the Research Institute
   ► The Last Survivor of Chelmno
   ► Annotator of the Lodz Ghetto Chronicle
   ►  Recent Visits to Yad Vashem
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Yad Vashem recently launched a new database, indexed from over one million pages of Holocaust-related documentation. The Shoah-Related Lists Database, which comprises some 11,650 archival records, includes deportation lists, inventories prepared by Jews during the Holocaust, registers compiled by survivors at liberation, and lists prepared by various municipalities under Nazi rule. Some of the documents are records gathered by Red Army investigators after liberation, which until recently were stored in archives in the former Soviet Union. The lists are in 20 languages and are estimated to contain some five million name entries. They have been catalogued in a unified format, and may be searched in English.

Most of the lists in the Databse are to be found in the Yad Vashem Archives and some 10% are located in the archive of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. The USHMM is also uploading the lists database, while on the Yad Vashem website a unique option to view most of the lists as scanned images is also available, although due to the multilingual and often handwritten appearance of the records, it is not possible at this stage to perform a computerized search within the lists themselves.

“This is a revolution in public access to information,” said Avner Shalev, Chairman of the Yad Vashem Directorate. “An integrated search of the new Shoah-Related Lists Database and the Central Database of Shoah Victims Names, which Yad Vashem uploaded to its website last year, can now shed further light on the fate of individual people during the Holocaust. Yad Vashem is investing a great deal of resources to bring the information located in our archives to homes around the world.”

Yad Vashem is especially grateful to the employees of Netvision Ltd. (Haifa) for their cooperation in this vital project, even while under threat of missile attacks emanating from southern Lebanon.

The program of identifying, cataloguing, and uploading information about Holocaust-related lists is supported by the Victim List Project of the Swiss Banks Settlement under the supervision of the Honorable Chief Judge Edward R. Korman of the United States District Court, whose goal is to make available to the public the names of all those killed or targeted by the Nazis. The scanning of the lists is part of the process of digitization of the Yad Vashem Archives, supported by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference).
 

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