
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
Home Plan Tips for Seniors - 2
Ukraine proved this drone-killer works. Now, the West is giving it a shot. - 3
NASA astronauts take new moonsuit for a swim | Space photo of the day for Nov. 28, 2025 - 4
‘The White Lotus’ sparked online interest in risky anxiety pills, study says - 5
Triple polar vortex to plunge central and eastern U.S. into Arctic cold through mid-December
UN estimates over 2,000 Sudanese pregnant women have fled el-Fasher to escape conflict
Sunken warship found off Danish coast after 225 years in ‘remarkable’ discovery
SpaceX launches Starlink satellites from California on 160th Falcon 9 flight of the year (video)
The 10 Most Famous Works of art Ever
Fossil analysis changes what paleontologists know about how long T. rex took to grow full size
Vietnam rethinks its flood strategy as climate change drives storms and devastation
Germany's Bundestag extends two armed forces missions abroad
Germany paves the way for tighter EU asylum rules
Shredded cheese sold in dozens of states recalled due to potential for metal fragment contamination












