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Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Items from Auschwitz death camp to tour Europe, America

An exhibit of some items from the former Nazi German death camp of Auschwitz are going on a tour of Europe and North America to bring its tragic truth about the Holocaust to a wider audience. The exhibit—titled Auschwitz. Not Long Ago. Not Far Away—will be the first-ever traveling show done by the museum and will include 600 original items. Most of them will come from the Auschwitz museum, but also from other collections, like Israel's Yad Vashem, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington D.C., and from survivors.

 

Auschwitz from above (Photo: Bild)

Auschwitz from above (Photo: Bild)

"Today, when the world is moving in uncertain directions," the exhibition can be a "great warning cry for us all" against building a "future on hatred, racism, anti-Semitism and bottomless contempt for another human being," museum chief Piotr M.A. Cywinski said.

SS belt buckle from exhibit (Photo: AP)

SS belt buckle from exhibit (Photo: AP)

The exhibit aims to tell victims' stories through their personal items. It will also show an original barrack from the Auschwitz-Monowitz part of the camp and a German freight train wagon that the Nazis used to bring inmates to the camp in.
Eyeglasses from Auschwitz (Photo: AP)

Eyeglasses from Auschwitz (Photo: AP)

The exhibit comes following a controversial art project by Israeli art student Rotem Bides, who features items she stole from Auschwitz. Bides, whose grandparents were Holocaust survivors, explained her actions by saying that "millions of people were murdered based on the moral laws of a certain country, under a certain regime. And if these are the laws, I can go there and act according to my own laws."

Wooden box made by Auschwitz inmate (Photo: AP)

Wooden box made by Auschwitz inmate (Photo: AP)

Some items, like an SS military belt buckle, are linked to the perpetrators, the German SS- men who built and operated the camp in occupied Poland during World War II.

The Not Long Ago. Not Far Away project will visit seven cities in Europe, starting in Madrid later this year, and seven in North America. The names of the cities in North America have not been released yet. Some 1.1 million people, mostly Europe's Jews, but also Poles, Roma and Soviet prisoners of war, were killed in the camp's gas chambers or died of hunger, disease and hard labor during World War II. The state museum was established in 1947 to preserve the memory of the victims and be a warning to future generations. In 2016, a record number of over 2 million people visited the Auschwitz museum.

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