German Auction of Holocaust Artifacts Canceled After Intense Backlash Over Commercial Exploitation.
A scheduled auction in Germany featuring hundreds of artifacts from the Holocaust, including chilling letters written by prisoners in concentration camps, was canceled on Sunday after intense backlash. The auction dubbed "The System of Terror" consisted of over 600 lots with vestiges from the Holocaust and Nazi Germany, including documents such as Gestapo index cards and letters penned by prisoners.
The inclusion of these letters sparked a fierce reaction across Europe, particularly in Poland, which was the site of many concentration camps used during the Holocaust. The addition of the letters stoked outrage in survivors' groups and sparked calls for cancellation from prominent figures.
Germany's Deputy Prime Minister Radoslaw Sikorski announced that the auction had been canceled after conversations with German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, who agreed that such an auction must be prevented. A Holocaust survivors group also had called on the auction house to nix the sale, citing concerns about the identification of individuals by name in the documents.
Christoph Heubner, executive vice president of The International Auschwitz Committee, condemned the auction as "cynical and shameless" and urged those responsible to cancel the sale or return it to the respective surviving families for display in museums or memorials.
The listing was removed from the Auktionhaus Felzmann website on Sunday afternoon.
A similar incident occurred at an auction house in Munich in 2019, where Adolf Hitler memorabilia were sold, despite mass condemnation and criticism. Another instance of a planned sale took place in 2021 when Jerusalem-based auction house had to suspend the sale of stamps used at Auschwitz due to moral concerns from Israel's own Holocaust memorial.
This latest development highlights ongoing issues of commercial exploitation of sensitive historical artifacts, particularly those connected with the Holocaust.
A scheduled auction in Germany featuring hundreds of artifacts from the Holocaust, including chilling letters written by prisoners in concentration camps, was canceled on Sunday after intense backlash. The auction dubbed "The System of Terror" consisted of over 600 lots with vestiges from the Holocaust and Nazi Germany, including documents such as Gestapo index cards and letters penned by prisoners.
The inclusion of these letters sparked a fierce reaction across Europe, particularly in Poland, which was the site of many concentration camps used during the Holocaust. The addition of the letters stoked outrage in survivors' groups and sparked calls for cancellation from prominent figures.
Germany's Deputy Prime Minister Radoslaw Sikorski announced that the auction had been canceled after conversations with German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, who agreed that such an auction must be prevented. A Holocaust survivors group also had called on the auction house to nix the sale, citing concerns about the identification of individuals by name in the documents.
Christoph Heubner, executive vice president of The International Auschwitz Committee, condemned the auction as "cynical and shameless" and urged those responsible to cancel the sale or return it to the respective surviving families for display in museums or memorials.
The listing was removed from the Auktionhaus Felzmann website on Sunday afternoon.
A similar incident occurred at an auction house in Munich in 2019, where Adolf Hitler memorabilia were sold, despite mass condemnation and criticism. Another instance of a planned sale took place in 2021 when Jerusalem-based auction house had to suspend the sale of stamps used at Auschwitz due to moral concerns from Israel's own Holocaust memorial.
This latest development highlights ongoing issues of commercial exploitation of sensitive historical artifacts, particularly those connected with the Holocaust.