(November 28, 2007 – Jerusalem) Following the opening of the
ITS Arolsen Archives today, Yad Vashem Chairman Avner
Shalev issued the following statement:
The opening of the ITS archive is a significant step forward.
This represents a breakthrough to bring information and
documents to survivors and others. Our understanding and
knowledge of the personal story of the Holocaust will be
deepened. All the resources and expertise of Yad Vashem will
be dedicated to ensuring that survivors, their families,
scholars and students, receive the information in the most
comprehensive manner. Our staff is already providing copies of
original documents from the ITS to survivors and their
families.
A special team at Yad Vashem has begun working with the ITS
material, based on 50 years of experience working with ITS
documents, some of which have been located at Yad Vashem since
the 1950s. In addition, new personnel will soon be added to
assist with public and survivor inquiries -- some 25,000 of
which are handled annually -- drawing upon the new ITS
material, the ITS documents that have been at Yad Vashem, and
the other material among the 75 million pages of documentation
housed in the Yad Vashem Archives.
Yad Vashem has a
team that is combing through the ITS material that we receive,
to recover more names and enrich Yad Vashem's Central Database
of Shoah Victims' Names, which currently contains over 3.3
million names of Jews murdered in the Shoah."